Privacy Policy
Effective date: July 15, 2026
Ask Nevada Law is a static, read-only publication. It exists to explain what Nevada law says — not to collect information about the people reading it. This page describes, in plain language, the little that happens with data when someone visits the site.
The short version
- No cookies. None — not even "essential" ones.
- No user accounts, logins, or profiles.
- No contact forms, comment boxes, or chat widgets.
- No email collection of any kind in the current version of the site.
- No sale or sharing of personal information — there is none to sell.
- Anonymous, aggregate visit counts only, via cookieless analytics.
Analytics
The site uses Plausible Analytics to understand, in aggregate, which pages are read. Plausible is a cookieless analytics tool: it sets no cookies, stores nothing on a visitor's device, and does not build profiles of individual visitors. IP addresses are not stored; they are used transiently to compute anonymized, aggregate statistics (such as total page views and the countries visits come from) and are not retained in a form that identifies anyone.
What Ask Nevada Law can see is statistical: "this page was viewed 400 times this month." What it cannot see is personal: who any individual reader is, or what any identifiable person read.
Cookies
This site does not use cookies, and it does not use local storage or similar technologies to track visitors. That is why there is no cookie consent banner — there is nothing to consent to.
Email addresses and newsletters
The site currently collects no email addresses. There is no newsletter, no signup form, and no mailing list. If a newsletter is added in the future, it will be strictly opt-in with its own clear consent flow, and this policy will be updated with a new effective date before any email collection begins.
No sale or sharing of personal information
Ask Nevada Law does not sell, rent, trade, or share personal information with anyone. Because the site collects no personal information in the first place, there is nothing that could be sold or shared.
Nevada privacy law (NRS Chapter 603A)
Nevada's Security and Privacy of Personal Information law, NRS Chapter 603A, requires certain website operators that collect "covered information" about Nevada consumers — names, postal and email addresses, phone numbers, and other identifiers (NRS 603A.320) — to post a privacy notice (NRS 603A.340) and to honor verified requests not to sell that information (NRS 603A.345).
Ask Nevada Law is a publisher that does not collect covered information about its visitors and does not sell any visitor information. This notice is published so that the site's practices are documented in a manner consistent with the notice described in NRS 603A.340. The full chapter is available from the Nevada Legislature at the official link above.
Links to other sites
Pages on this site link to official sources — chiefly the Nevada Legislature (leg.state.nv.us) and the Nevada courts — so readers can verify every citation, and occasionally to other third-party sites. Those sites have their own privacy practices, which Ask Nevada Law does not control and is not responsible for. Once a link leaves this site, this policy no longer applies.
Children
The site does not knowingly collect information from anyone, including children. There are no features that accept user input, so there is no mechanism by which a child could submit personal information here.
Changes to this policy
If the site's practices change — for example, if a newsletter launches — this policy will be revised first, with a new effective date shown at the top of the page.
Contact
A contact page and public contact email are forthcoming. Until they are published, any updates to this policy will appear on this page.
About this site
This site provides general legal information for educational purposes. It is not legal advice, this site is not a law firm, and no attorney–client relationship is created by using it. Ask Nevada Law is not affiliated with any government agency or the Nevada courts. Laws change and every situation is different — consult a licensed Nevada attorney.