Confidentiality

Your business information should not be passed around casually.

In high-risk industries, privacy matters. Payment routes, banking needs, traffic sources, company names, provider relationships, deal terms, and direct contacts should not be exposed publicly or shared before there is a real reason. InVault keeps the first stage private, controlled, and protected.

Confidentiality is part of the product

InVault is not an open directory, public marketplace, or paid listing board. That matters because the people using InVault often deal with sensitive business needs: PSPs, banking, traffic, legal structure, setup partners, provider relationships, and private commercial terms.

A careless introduction can expose a company, damage a relationship, create risk, or waste time for both sides. That is why the early stage stays controlled before direct contact information is released.

How InVault protects the process

We handle sensitive business information with care because trust is the reason InVault exists. The goal is not to collect data. The goal is to protect the connection and help the right people move forward privately.

No public listing

InVault does not publish your request, company name, contact details, provider details, or business needs in a public directory.

Contact details stay protected

Direct contact information is not shared casually. It is only released when there is a real reason and the next step makes sense.

Private first-stage process

Early communication can stay through InVault or with our involvement so both sides can understand the fit before direct access opens.

Separate sensitive information

Sensitive information is kept separate from the public website and handled with more care than normal marketing or browsing data.

Encrypted where appropriate

Sensitive records can be stored in protected systems and encrypted where appropriate, depending on the type of information and operational need.

No selling private data

InVault does not sell private contact details, requests, business information, or provider data as public visibility or lead inventory.

Information we treat carefully

Different requests require different information. We do not need unnecessary sensitive details at the first step, but when information is needed to review fit, it should be handled carefully.

Company and brand details

Business names, project names, operating brands, company structures, ownership context, and sensitive launch information.

Payment and banking needs

PSP requirements, banking needs, settlement flow, current routes, target geos, volume, payment issues, and provider conversations.

Traffic and partner information

Affiliate sources, lead sources, traffic partners, media buying needs, conversion setup, and commercial traffic discussions.

Provider and vendor details

Provider names, capabilities, commercial terms, service areas, relationship status, and private provider communication.

Commercial terms

Pricing, commissions, setup fees, revenue share, payout logic, contract direction, test terms, and private deal details.

Contact information

Names, emails, phone numbers, Telegram handles, WhatsApp numbers, company contacts, and direct communication details.

Contact details are not released too early

One of the main reasons InVault exists is to avoid random, uncontrolled contact sharing. Direct contact details should not be passed around before both sides understand the need, the stage, the possible fit, and the reason to speak directly.

In some cases, early communication may stay through InVault. In other cases, direct access can open once the fit is clear and the next step makes sense. The decision depends on the request, provider, risk, and commercial context.

Sensitive data should not sit with the public website

The public website should not be the place where sensitive business information lives. Private request data, provider records, contact details, notes, and internal review information should be handled separately from the public frontend where appropriate.

InVault’s operational direction is to keep sensitive records separate, protected, and encrypted where appropriate. This supports the main principle: the public website should explain InVault, but sensitive business information should be handled in a more controlled environment.

What we do not do

Confidentiality is also about what we refuse to do. InVault is not built around selling private contact details or exposing people for public browsing.

  • We do not expose private requests publicly.
  • We do not publish provider names as an open list.
  • We do not sell contact details as lead inventory.
  • We do not release direct contacts before the fit makes sense.
  • We do not treat sensitive business information like normal marketing data.
  • We do not guarantee absolute secrecy if information must be reviewed for risk, legal protection, abuse prevention, or prohibited activity.

Confidentiality has limits

InVault treats business information seriously, but confidentiality does not protect illegal conduct, sanctions exposure, fraud, threats, abuse, false information, money laundering, terrorism-finance exposure, or misuse of the process.

We may reject, stop, preserve, review, or disclose information where needed to protect InVault, comply with law, prevent abuse, investigate risk, respond to prohibited activity, or protect another party.

FAQ

Does InVault publish my company or request?

No. InVault does not publish requests, company details, contact information, or provider information in an open directory.

When are contact details shared?

Contact details are only shared when there is a real reason, the fit makes sense, and the next step requires direct communication.

Does InVault sell private data?

No. InVault does not sell private contact details, business requests, provider information, or sensitive business data as public visibility or lead inventory.

Is all communication confidential?

InVault treats communication as private and confidential, but confidentiality has limits. It does not protect illegal activity, sanctions exposure, fraud, abuse, threats, or misuse of the process.

Where is sensitive information stored?

Sensitive information should be kept separate from the public website and handled in protected systems where appropriate. InVault’s goal is to protect the process, not expose private business details.

Can InVault share information with providers?

InVault may share only the information needed to review fit or move a serious request forward. We do not casually hand out private details.

Want to discuss a sensitive request?

Tell us what you need without exposing more than necessary at the first step. We’ll review it privately and decide the right next move.

Start a Private Request