
Privacy Wild Fortune
Table of contents
This page explains how an online casino like Wild Fortune generally handles personal data for players in Australia. It's a plain-language overview, not a binding legal document, and it follows the framework of the Australian Privacy Act 1988 and its Australian Privacy Principles (APPs), overseen by the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC). Wild Fortune runs under Curacao licence 8048/JAZ2020-074, which brings its own data obligations on top of the Australian rules.
🔐 What Data Is Collected
The platform collects what's needed to open and run an account: registration details such as name, date of birth, email and country, payment information tied to deposits and withdrawals, and usage data from normal play. KYC documents — usually a photo ID and proof of address — are collected before a first withdrawal. Cookies and similar tools record session and preference data to keep the site working across visits.
📂 How Data Is Used
Collected data supports account management, payment processing, fraud prevention and compliance with legal and licensing duties. Identity checks confirm age and identity under both Australian rules and Curacao licence terms. Aggregated usage data helps keep the platform stable, and marketing messages go out only where you've consented, which you can withdraw at any time. The KYC step that confirms identity also doubles as an anti-fraud and anti-money-laundering measure, which is why it's required before a first withdrawal rather than at sign-up. Data tied to gambling activity is also retained where licensing rules require records to be kept, separate from optional marketing data.
🤝 Data Sharing And Third Parties
Personal data may be shared with payment processors to settle transactions, with game providers where gameplay requires it, and with regulators where the law or the licence demands. The operator does not sell personal data. Any third party handling data on the casino's behalf is expected to meet equivalent protection standards. Regulatory reporting under the Curacao licence is one example where sharing is not optional — licensing conditions can require certain records to be made available to the authority. Beyond that, sharing is limited to what a transaction or a legal duty actually needs, rather than broad distribution of player information.
🍪 Cookies And Tracking
The site uses session cookies to keep you logged in, preference cookies to remember settings, and analytics cookies to read general traffic patterns. You can manage or disable non-essential cookies in your browser, though some features may behave differently if you do. Essential cookies for login and security can't be switched off without breaking core functions, while analytics and marketing cookies are optional and governed by a consent banner.
⚖️ Your Rights Under Australian Law
Under the Privacy Act 1988 and the APPs, you have the right to access the personal information held about you, request correction of anything inaccurate, and ask how your data is used. You can also withdraw marketing consent and lodge a complaint with the OAIC if you believe your data has been mishandled. Requests go through the support team at Wild Fortune. These rights sit alongside the casino's own retention rules: some records tied to a gambling account must be kept for a legally defined period, so a deletion request is honoured only to the extent the law allows. Where data is no longer required and no rule compels keeping it, it is removed rather than held on file indefinitely.
🔒 Data Security
Data at Wild Fortune is protected with SSL encryption, access controls and secure storage. Payment and identity details move over encrypted connections, and verification data is held only for the period the law and licence require, not indefinitely. Access is limited to staff who need it for account, payment or compliance work, and verification documents sit in restricted systems kept apart from general account records. You can strengthen your own side of it by using a unique password and keeping login details private, since account access is the most common point of exposure.
🎧 Contact And Complaints
Players with a data concern can reach the support team through live chat or email. For anything unresolved, Australian players can escalate to the OAIC as the supervisory authority. The casino aims to handle data requests within a reasonable time.
📊 Conclusion
The platform handles personal data in line with the Australian Privacy Act 1988 and its Curacao licensing duties, collecting only what running and verifying an account needs. You keep clear rights of access, correction and complaint, and the support team is the route for any privacy question.

