California residents have specific rights under state privacy law including the right to know what personal data Rumble collects, the right to request deletion of that data, and the right to opt out of the sale or sharing of personal information.
This analysis describes what Rumble's agreement states, permits, or reserves. It does not constitute a legal determination about enforceability. Regulatory applicability and practical outcomes may vary by jurisdiction, enforcement context, and individual circumstances. Read our methodology
If you live in California, you have legally enforceable rights to access, correct, delete, and opt out of the sharing of your personal data, and Rumble is required to honor these requests within specific timeframes.
Interpretive note: The full text of the California rights provision was not available due to document truncation; analysis is based on standard Rumble privacy policy provisions and applicable CCPA/CPRA requirements.
The updated policy modifies the language governing notification of Personal Information disclosure. The prior version stated that Rumble 'will attempt to notify you before we disclose your Personal Information,' whereas the revised language states the company 'may attempt to notify you.' This shifts the provision from an asserted commitment to attempt notification toward a discretionary authorization to do so when permitted by law. Under the revised terms, notification attempts are now framed as optional rather than intended.
View change record →California residents can submit requests to Rumble to access, correct, or delete their personal data, and can opt out of the sharing of their data for advertising purposes under CCPA and CPRA.
How other platforms handle this
If you are a California resident, you may have the right to: Know what personal information we collect, use, disclose, sell, or share. Correct inaccurate personal information. Delete your personal information. Opt out of the sale or sharing of your personal information. Limit the use and disclosure ...
If you are a California resident, you have the right to: Know what personal information is being collected about you; Know whether your personal information is sold or disclosed and to whom; Say no to the sale of personal information; Access your personal information; Request deletion of your person...
If you are a California resident, you have the right to know what personal information we collect, use, and disclose about you; the right to request deletion of your personal information; the right to opt out of the sale or sharing of your personal information; the right to correct inaccurate person...
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(1) REGULATORY LANDSCAPE: This provision engages the California Consumer Privacy Act and its amendment the California Privacy Rights Act, enforced by the California Privacy Protection Agency and the California Attorney General. Specific rights include the right to know, right to delete, right to correct, right to opt out of sale or sharing, and right to limit use of sensitive personal information. Response timeframes of 45 days with a possible 45-day extension apply under CPRA. (2) GOVERNANCE EXPOSURE: Medium. Operational readiness to fulfill CPRA data subject rights requests within statutory timeframes is a recurring compliance challenge for platforms with large user bases. The presence of third-party advertising data sharing creates particular exposure for the opt-out of sharing obligation, which requires a prominent and functional opt-out mechanism. (3) JURISDICTION FLAGS: Applies specifically to California residents. Other states with similar privacy frameworks including Virginia, Colorado, Connecticut, and Texas may create analogous obligations not explicitly addressed in this document section. (4) CONTRACT AND VENDOR IMPLICATIONS: Data processing agreements with third-party advertising partners including Facebook and Google should include contractual commitments to honor opt-out signals flowing from Rumble's users. Global Privacy Control signal recognition should be assessed. (5) COMPLIANCE CONSIDERATIONS: Verify that a 'Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information' link or equivalent mechanism is prominently displayed and functional. Assess whether the intake process for CPRA requests is documented, staffed, and capable of meeting statutory response deadlines. Review whether sensitive personal information categories are properly identified and subject to use limitation rights.
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If you live in California, you have legally enforceable rights to access, correct, delete, and opt out of the sharing of your personal data, and Rumble is required to honor these requests within specific timeframes.
California residents can submit requests to Rumble to access, correct, or delete their personal data, and can opt out of the sharing of their data for advertising purposes under CCPA and CPRA.
ConductAtlas has identified this type of provision across 14 platforms. See the full comparison.
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