← Original Sin Paintball

Privacy Policy

Last updated 6 July 2026

Original Sin Paintball (OSP) is a one-person build by Andrew Kennedy, a sole trader in Australia (ABN 63 526 303 488). This policy covers originalsinpaintball.com and the OSP apps: Genesis, Verdict, Oracle and Eden. It is written in plain language, and the short version is that I only collect what the apps genuinely need, and I do not sell your information to anyone.

What I collect

Why I collect it

What is public

Genesis is a public record of the scene. Team pages, rosters, results and anything you post to the community board are visible to other people by design. Your email address and password are never shown publicly. Only add to a public profile what you are happy for the scene to see.

Who I share it with

I do not sell your information, and I do not share it for advertising. A small number of trusted providers process data so the apps can run:

I may also disclose information if the law genuinely requires it.

Cookies

OSP uses a single login cookie, set across originalsinpaintball.com, so you stay signed in as you move between the apps. There are no third-party advertising or tracking cookies.

Your choices

You can edit or remove most of your content yourself while signed in. You can also ask me to delete your account and the personal data tied to it. Get in touch through the contact page and I will sort it out.

Security and children

Passwords are hashed and I take reasonable steps to protect your data, though no online system can be perfectly secure. OSP is aimed at people involved in competitive paintball and is not intended for children under 13.

Payments

The site does not currently take payments or store any card details. If that changes in future, this policy will be updated first.

Changes and contact

I may update this policy as the apps grow. The date at the top shows the latest version. For any privacy question or request, reach me through the contact page.

This is a plain-language policy written by the person who runs OSP, not formal legal advice. It reflects how the apps actually work today.