Seller HelpPlatform UpdatesPrivacy PolicyMobile App
6 min readUpdated May 23, 2026

Privacy Policy Updates for Sellers and App Users

This notice summarizes the recent privacy policy changes implemented through CashMarket's Termly-managed policy so there is a plain-language written record inside the resource library.

Why We Are Publishing This Notice

CashMarket updated its privacy policy through the Termly-managed policy system. Because most current seller-side users are still interacting through forms rather than through a traditional logged-in account flow, this article serves as a straightforward written notice describing what changed and what those changes mean at a high level.

This summary is not a replacement for the full privacy policy. It is a companion notice intended to make the main updates easier to understand, especially for sellers who are submitting property information or contact details through lead forms.

Summary of the Main Changes

  • The policy now explicitly includes the mobile app as part of the product scope.
  • The business description language was simplified and the public naming was updated from Cash Market to CashMarket.
  • Password collection is now disclosed for user flows where account credentials may be created or used.
  • Device data collection is described more explicitly.
  • The mobile app disclosure now states that we may collect information about mobile devices and may send push notifications.
  • The policy adds broader language describing how data may be used for legal matters, communication support, testimonials, and feedback.
  • The sharing and sale disclosures were expanded to state that data may be shared or sold to third-party buyers, affiliates, and service providers involved in retargeting and ad placement.
  • The policy now references Google Maps API usage where location-related services rely on it.
  • Form-fill disclosures were clarified so sellers understand that submitted information may be shared or sold to property buyers.

What This Means for Sellers

For most sellers, the practical change is not that CashMarket suddenly began operating as a logged-in consumer dashboard. The more important point is that the policy now more clearly describes the existing lead-routing and marketing reality of the platform. When a seller fills out a form, that information may be used to connect them with property buyers and related partners, and it may also support operational and marketing systems around those flows.

In other words, the disclosure language is now more explicit about how submitted seller information can move through buyer matching, affiliate relationships, advertising support tools, and related service-provider workflows. That is especially relevant because most seller interactions still begin with a form submission rather than a long account-creation sequence.

What This Means for Mobile App Users

The updated policy now directly acknowledges the mobile app. That includes disclosure around mobile device information and the possibility of push notifications. This is mainly a scope and transparency update: the policy now reflects that CashMarket is not only a website experience.

It also means users reviewing the policy should read it as covering both browser-based and app-based experiences where applicable, rather than assuming the policy is limited to the public website alone.

Data Sharing and Lead Routing Clarifications

One of the more important clarifications is that seller-submitted data may be shared or sold to third-party property buyers, affiliates, and tool providers used for ad placement, retargeting, and related marketing support. That is the kind of disclosure users should see clearly if the platform is facilitating introductions, lead distribution, or performance marketing tied to form submissions.

The privacy update also makes clearer that form fills are not just passive website inquiries. They can be part of a lead flow in which information is used to help route the seller to buyers or partner systems. For a seller, that is one of the most meaningful practical takeaways from the update.

Other Disclosure Changes Worth Noting

  • The addition of passwords to the disclosed data categories helps the policy better match account-based functionality where credentials exist.
  • Google Maps API usage is now called out, which matters where map, place, or location-support features are involved.
  • Use cases involving legal matters, testimonials, and feedback are now described more directly.
  • The naming update from Cash Market to CashMarket improves consistency across public-facing documents and product surfaces.

Where to Review Privacy Rights and Requests

If you want to know what information CashMarket stores about you, want to request a correction, or want to request deletion where applicable, review the platform's privacy-request instructions at Data Access, Correction, and Deletion Requests.

That page explains how to contact support, what information to include in a request, and what kinds of actions a user may ask for in relation to personal information stored by the platform.