data broker directory
How to Opt Out of Wiland
Wiland is registered as a data broker with the State of California. Under the CCPA/CPRA (and the Delete Act) you can demand it delete your personal information and stop selling it — even if you aren't a California resident, most brokers process requests from anyone.
Opt out directly at Wiland →The broker's own opt-out instructions
We are a marketing company whose clients range from some of the biggest companies and charities in the U.S. to local charities, such as food banks. We help our clients identify people who might be interested in their marketing offers. Sometimes our research is intended to help our clients find new donors or customers, others to find new ways to serve or connect with existing donors or customers. But whether they are our clients, the American consumer, or others, we care about people, and provide consumers with privacy choices. We have provided a form and a toll free number on our website at www.Wiland.com/privacy-choices for consumers to submit “do not sell†or other requests under the CCPA.
What it says it collects
✗ Data on minors✗ Account logins / security codes✗ Government ID numbers✗ Citizenship / immigration status✗ Union membership✗ Sexual orientation✗ Gender identity✗ Biometric data✗ Precise geolocation✗ Reproductive health data
Its 2024 privacy-request numbers (self-reported)
| Deletion requests received | 513 |
| — complied in whole | 489 |
| — complied in part | 0 |
| — denied | 24 |
| Median days to respond | 5 |
| Opt-out-of-sale requests received | 137 |
| — complied in whole | 42 |
| — denied | 95 |
Contact
www.wiland.com · [email protected]
There are 500+ registered data brokers. Paid services like Incogni and DeleteMe submit and chase removal requests for you across hundreds of brokers at once. Our comparison of data-removal services →
Source: California Data Broker Registry (CPPA) — self-reported filings, retrieved 2026-07-18. Request statistics are the broker's own reported 2024 CCPA numbers. Blank items mean the broker did not answer that question, not "no."