Name and contact of the responsible person pur­suant to Article 4 (7) DSGVO


GK Indus­tries GmbH
Marie-Curie-Strasse 15–17
24568 Kal­ten­kirchen
Rep­res­ented by:
Nils Schröder

E‑Mail: info@gk-industries.de

Tel.: +49 (0)4191 76709–10

Security and pro­tection of your per­sonal data

We con­sider it our primary respons­ib­ility to maintain the con­fid­en­ti­ality of the per­sonal data you provide to us and to protect it from unau­thorised access. That is why we take the utmost care and apply state-of-the-art security standards to ensure maximum pro­tection of your per­sonal data.

As a company under private law, we are subject to the pro­vi­sions of the European General Data Pro­tection Reg­u­lation (DSGVO) and the reg­u­la­tions of the Federal Data Pro­tection Act (BDSG). We have taken tech­nical and organ­isa­tional measures to ensure that the reg­u­la­tions on data pro­tection are observed both by us and by our external service pro­viders.

Defin­i­tions

The legis­lator requires that per­sonal data are pro­cessed in a lawful manner, in good faith and in a way that is com­pre­hensible to the data subject (“law­fulness, pro­cessing in good faith, trans­parency”). To ensure this, we inform you about the indi­vidual legal defin­i­tions that are also used in this privacy policy:

Per­sonal data
“Per­sonal data” means any inform­ation relating to an iden­tified or iden­ti­fiable natural person (here­in­after “data subject”); an iden­ti­fiable natural person is one who can be iden­tified, dir­ectly or indir­ectly, in par­ticular by ref­erence to an iden­tifier such as a name, an iden­ti­fic­ation number, loc­ation data, an online iden­tifier or to one or more factors spe­cific to the physical, physiolo­gical, genetic, mental, eco­nomic, cul­tural or social identity of that natural person.

Pro­cessing
“Pro­cessing” means any oper­ation or set of oper­a­tions which is per­formed upon per­sonal data, whether or not by auto­matic means, such as col­lection, recording, organ­isation, filing, storage, adapt­ation or alter­ation, retrieval, con­sultation, use, dis­closure by trans­mission, dis­sem­in­ation or oth­erwise making available, alignment or com­bin­ation, restriction, erasure or destruction.

Restriction of pro­cessing
“Restriction of pro­cessing” means the marking of stored per­sonal data with the aim of lim­iting their future pro­cessing.

Pro­filing
“Pro­filing” means any auto­mated pro­cessing of per­sonal data which con­sists in using such per­sonal data to evaluate certain per­sonal aspects relating to a natural person, in par­ticular to analyse or predict aspects relating to that natural person’s per­formance at work, eco­nomic situ­ation, health, per­sonal pref­er­ences, interests, reli­ab­ility, beha­viour, loc­ation or change of loc­ation.

Pseud­onymisation
“Pseud­onymisation” means the pro­cessing of per­sonal data in such a way that the per­sonal data can no longer be attributed to a spe­cific data subject without the use of addi­tional inform­ation, provided that such addi­tional inform­ation is kept sep­ar­ately and is subject to tech­nical and organ­isa­tional measures which ensure that the per­sonal data cannot be attributed to an iden­tified or iden­ti­fiable natural person.

File system
“File system” means any struc­tured col­lection of per­sonal data accessible according to spe­cified cri­teria, whether such col­lection is main­tained in a cent­ralised, decent­ralised or func­tional or geo­graphical manner.

Con­troller
“Con­troller’ means a natural or legal person, public authority, agency or other body which alone or jointly with others determines the pur­poses and means of the pro­cessing of per­sonal data; where the pur­poses and means of such pro­cessing are determined by Union or Member State law, the con­troller or the spe­cific cri­teria for its des­ig­nation may be provided for under Union or Member State law.

Pro­cessor
“Pro­cessor” means a natural or legal person, public authority, agency or other body which pro­cesses per­sonal data on behalf of the Con­troller.

Recipient
’re­cipient’ means a natural or legal person, public authority, agency or other body to whom per­sonal data are dis­closed, whether or not a third party. However, public author­ities which may receive per­sonal data in the context of a spe­cific invest­ig­ative task under Union or Member State law shall not be con­sidered as recip­ients and the pro­cessing of such data by those author­ities shall be carried out in accordance with the applicable data pro­tection rules, in accordance with the pur­poses of the pro­cessing.

third party
“Third party” means a natural or legal person, public authority, agency or other body, other than the data subject, the con­troller, the pro­cessor and the persons authorised to process the per­sonal data under the direct respons­ib­ility of the con­troller or the pro­cessor.

Consent
Consent” of the data subject means any freely given spe­cific, informed and unam­biguous indic­ation of his or her wishes in the form of a statement or other unam­biguous affirm­ative act by which the data subject sig­nifies his or her agreement to per­sonal data relating to him or her being pro­cessed.

Law­fulness of the pro­cessing

The pro­cessing of per­sonal data is only lawful if there is a legal basis for the pro­cessing. The legal basis for pro­cessing may be in accordance with Article 6(1) of the Data Pro­tection Act.
lit. a — f DSGVO in par­ticular:

The data subject has given consent to the pro­cessing of per­sonal data con­cerning him or her for one or more spe­cific pur­poses;
the pro­cessing is necessary for the per­formance of a con­tract to which the data subject is party or for the imple­ment­ation of pre-con­tractual measures taken at the data subject’s request;
pro­cessing is necessary for com­pliance with a legal oblig­ation to which the con­troller is subject;
pro­cessing is necessary for com­pliance with a legal oblig­ation to which the con­troller is subject;
pro­cessing is necessary for the per­formance of a task carried out in the public interest or in the exercise of official authority vested in the con­troller;
pro­cessing is necessary for the pur­poses of the legit­imate interests of the con­troller or of a third party, except where such interests are over­ridden by the interests or fun­da­mental rights and freedoms of the data subject which require the pro­tection of per­sonal data, in par­ticular where the data subject is a child.
Inform­ation on the col­lection of per­sonal data

(1) In the fol­lowing, we inform you about the col­lection of per­sonal data when using our website. Per­sonal data are e.g. name, address, e‑mail addresses, user beha­viour.

(2) If you contact us by e‑mail or via a contact form, the data you provide (your e‑mail address, your name) will be stored by us in order to answer your ques­tions. We delete the data accruing in this context after the storage is no longer necessary or the pro­cessing is restricted if there are legal retention oblig­a­tions.

Col­lection of per­sonal data when vis­iting our website

In the case of mere inform­a­tional use of the website, i.e. if you do not register or oth­erwise transmit inform­ation to us, we only collect the per­sonal data that your browser transmits to our server. If you wish to view our website, we collect the fol­lowing data, which is tech­nically necessary for us to display our website to you and to ensure its sta­bility and security (legal basis is Art. 6 para. 1 p. 1 lit. f DSGVO):


  • IP address
  • Date and time of the request
  • Time zone dif­ference from Greenwich Mean Time (GMT)
  • Content of the request (con­crete page)
  • Access Status/HTTP Status Code
  • Data volume trans­ferred in each case
  • Website from which the request comes
  • Browser
  • Oper­ating system and its interface
  • Lan­guage and version of the browser software.
  • Use of cookies


(1) In addition to the data men­tioned above, cookies are stored on your com­puter when you use our website. Cookies are small text files that are stored on your hard drive in relation to the browser you are using and which provide the party setting the cookie with certain inform­ation. Cookies cannot execute pro­grams or transmit viruses to your com­puter. They are used to make the website as a whole more user-friendly and effective.

(2) This website uses the fol­lowing types of cookies, the scope and func­tion­ality of which are explained below:

Tran­sient cookies (see 1.)
Tran­sient cookies are auto­mat­ically deleted when you close the browser. These include, in par­ticular, session cookies. These store a so-called session ID, with which various requests from your browser can be assigned to the joint session. This enables your com­puter to be recog­nised when you return to our website. The session cookies are deleted when you log out or close the browser.
Other func­tions and offers on our website

(1) Neben der rein inform­at­or­ischen Nutzung unserer Website bieten wir ver­schiedene Leis­tungen an, die Sie bei Interesse nutzen können. Dazu müssen Sie in der Regel weitere per­son­en­bezogene Daten angeben, die wir zur Erbringung der jew­ei­ligen Leistung nutzen und für die die zuvor genannten Grundsätze zur Daten­ver­arbeitung gelten.

(2) In some cases, we use external service pro­viders to process your data. These have been care­fully selected and com­mis­sioned by us, are bound by our instruc­tions and are reg­u­larly mon­itored.

(3) Fur­thermore, we may pass on your per­sonal data to third parties if we offer pro­mo­tions, com­pet­i­tions, con­tracts or similar ser­vices together with partners. You will receive more inform­ation on this when you provide your per­sonal data or below in the description of the offer.

(4) Insofar as our service pro­viders or partners have their registered office in a state outside the European Eco­nomic Area (EEA), we will inform you of the con­sequences of this cir­cum­stance in the description of the offer.



Google Ana­lytics

This website uses func­tions of the web ana­lysis service Google Ana­lytics. The pro­vider is Google Ireland Limited (“Google”), Gordon House, Barrow Street, Dublin 4, Ireland.

Google Ana­lytics enables the website operator to analyse the beha­viour of website vis­itors. In doing so, the website operator receives various usage data, such as page views, length of stay, oper­ating systems used and the origin of the user. This data may be sum­marised by Google in a profile that is assigned to the respective user or their end device.

Google Ana­lytics uses tech­no­logies that enable the recog­nition of the user for the purpose of ana­lysing user beha­viour (e.g. cookies or device fin­ger­printing). The inform­ation col­lected by Google about the use of this website is usually trans­ferred to a Google server in the USA and stored there.

The use of this ana­lysis tool is based on Art. 6 para. 1 lit. f DSGVO. The website operator has a legit­imate interest in ana­lysing user beha­viour in order to optimise both its website and its advert­ising. If a cor­res­ponding consent has been requested (e.g. consent to the storage of cookies), the pro­cessing is carried out exclus­ively on the basis of Art. 6 para. 1 lit. a DSGVO; the consent can be revoked at any time.

IP anonymisation

We have activated the IP anonymisation function on this website. This means that your IP address is shortened by Google within member states of the European Union or in other con­tracting states of the Agreement on the European Eco­nomic Area before being trans­mitted to the USA. Only in excep­tional cases will the full IP address be trans­mitted to a Google server in the USA and shortened there. On behalf of the operator of this website, Google will use this inform­ation for the purpose of eval­u­ating your use of the website, com­piling reports on website activity and providing other ser­vices relating to website activity and internet usage to the website operator. The IP address trans­mitted by your browser as part of Google Ana­lytics will not be merged with other Google data.

Browser Plugin

You can prevent the col­lection and pro­cessing of your data by Google by down­loading and installing the browser plugin available at the fol­lowing link: https://tools.google.com/dlpage/gaoptout?hl=de.

You can find more inform­ation on how Google Ana­lytics handles user data in Google’s privacy policy: https://support.google.com/analytics/answer/6004245?hl=de.

Job pro­cessing

We have con­cluded an order pro­cessing con­tract with Google and fully implement the strict require­ments of the German data pro­tection author­ities when using Google Ana­lytics.

Demo­graphic char­ac­ter­istics in Google Ana­lytics

This website uses the “demo­graphic char­ac­ter­istics” function of Google Ana­lytics in order to be able to display suitable advert­ise­ments to website vis­itors within the Google advert­ising network. This allows reports to be gen­erated that include state­ments about the age, gender and interests of site vis­itors. This data comes from interest-based advert­ising from Google as well as visitor data from third-party pro­viders. This data cannot be assigned to a spe­cific person. You can deac­tivate this function at any time via the ad set­tings in your Google account or gen­erally pro­hibit the col­lection of your data by Google Ana­lytics as shown in the item “Objection to data col­lection”.

Google Ana­lytics E‑Com­merce-Tracking

This website uses the “e‑commerce tracking” function of Google Ana­lytics. With the help of e‑commerce tracking, the website operator can analyse the pur­chasing beha­viour of website vis­itors to improve its online mar­keting cam­paigns. This involves recording inform­ation such as orders placed, average order values, shipping costs and the time from viewing to pur­chasing a product. This data can be sum­marised by Google under a trans­action ID that is assigned to the respective user or their device.

Storage dur­ation

Data stored by Google at user and event level that are linked to cookies, user iden­ti­fiers (e.g. user ID) or advert­ising IDs (e.g. Double­Click cookies, Android advert­ising ID) are anonymised or deleted after 14 months. Details can be found under the fol­lowing link: https://support.google.com/analytics/answer/7667196?hl=de

Children

Our offer is basically aimed at adults. Persons under the age of 18 should not transmit any per­sonal data to us without the consent of their parents or legal guardians.

Rights of the data subject

(1) Revoc­ation of consent

If the pro­cessing of per­sonal data is based on consent given, you have the right to revoke your consent at any time. The revoc­ation of the consent does not affect the law­fulness of the pro­cessing carried out on the basis of the consent until the revoc­ation.

You can contact us at any time to exercise your right of with­drawal.

(2) Right to con­firm­ation

You have the right to request con­firm­ation from the con­troller as to whether we are pro­cessing per­sonal data relating to you. You can request con­firm­ation at any time using the contact details above.

(3) Right to inform­ation

If per­sonal data are pro­cessed, you can request inform­ation about these per­sonal data and about the fol­lowing inform­ation at any time:

the pur­poses of pro­cessing;
the cat­egories of per­sonal data that are pro­cessed;
the recip­ients or cat­egories of recip­ients to whom the per­sonal data have been or will be dis­closed, in par­ticular in the case of recip­ients in third coun­tries or inter­na­tional organ­isa­tions;
if pos­sible, the planned dur­ation for which the per­sonal data will be stored or, if this is not pos­sible, the cri­teria for determ­ining this dur­ation;
if pos­sible, the planned dur­ation for which the per­sonal data will be stored or, if this is not pos­sible, the cri­teria for determ­ining this dur­ation;
the existence of a right of appeal to a super­visory authority;
if the per­sonal data are not col­lected from the data subject, any available inform­ation on the origin of the data;
the existence of auto­mated decision-making, including pro­filing, pur­suant to Article 22(1) and (4) of the GDPR and, at least in those cases, mean­ingful inform­ation about the logic involved and the scope and intended effects of such pro­cessing for the data subject.
If per­sonal data are trans­ferred to a third country or to an inter­na­tional organ­isation, you have the right to be informed about the appro­priate safe­guards pur­suant to Article 46 of the GDPR in con­nection with the transfer. We will provide a copy of the per­sonal data that is the subject of the pro­cessing. We may charge a reas­onable fee based on admin­is­trative costs for any addi­tional copies you request from the indi­vidual. If you make the request elec­tron­ically, the inform­ation shall be provided in a com­monly used elec­tronic format, unless it indicates oth­erwise. The right to receive a copy under para­graph 3 shall not affect the rights and freedoms of other persons.

(4) Right of rec­ti­fic­ation

You have the right to request that we correct any inac­curate per­sonal data relating to you without undue delay. Taking into account the pur­poses of the pro­cessing, you have the right to request the com­pletion of incom­plete per­sonal data, including by means of a sup­ple­mentary declar­ation.



(5) Right to erasure (“right to be for­gotten”)

You have the right to request the con­troller to delete per­sonal data con­cerning you without delay and we are obliged to delete per­sonal data without delay if one of the fol­lowing reasons applies:

The per­sonal data are no longer necessary for the pur­poses for which they were col­lected or oth­erwise pro­cessed.
The data subject with­draws the consent on which the pro­cessing was based pur­suant to Article 6(1)(a) or Article 9(2)(a) of the GDPR and there is no other legal basis for the pro­cessing.
The data subject objects to the pro­cessing pur­suant to Article 21(1) of the GDPR and there are no over­riding legit­imate grounds for the pro­cessing, or the data subject objects to the pro­cessing pur­suant to Article 21(2) of the GDPR.
The per­sonal data have been pro­cessed unlaw­fully.
The deletion of the per­sonal data is necessary for com­pliance with a legal oblig­ation under Union or Member State law to which the con­troller is subject.
The per­sonal data have been col­lected in relation to inform­ation society ser­vices offered in accordance with Article 8(1) of the GDPR.
Where the con­troller has made the per­sonal data public and is obliged to erase it pur­suant to para­graph 1, it shall take reas­onable steps, including tech­nical measures, having regard to the available tech­nology and the cost of imple­ment­ation, to inform data con­trollers which process the per­sonal data that a data subject has requested that they erase all links to, or copies or rep­lic­a­tions of, that per­sonal data.

The right to erasure (“right to be for­gotten”) does not exist insofar as the pro­cessing is necessary:

to exercise the right to freedom of expression and inform­ation;
for com­pliance with a legal oblig­ation which requires pro­cessing under Union or Member State law to which the con­troller is subject or for the per­formance of a task carried out in the public interest or in the exercise of official authority vested in the con­troller;
for reasons of public interest in the field of public health pur­suant to Article 9(2)(h) and (i) and Article 9(3) of the GDPR;
for archiving pur­poses in the public interest, sci­entific or his­torical research pur­poses or stat­istical pur­poses pur­suant to Article 89(1) of the GDPR, where the right referred to in para­graph 1 is likely to render impossible or ser­i­ously pre­judice the achievement of the pur­poses of such pro­cessing, or
for the assertion, exercise or defence of legal claims.


(6) Right to restrict pro­cessing

You have the right to request us to restrict the pro­cessing of your per­sonal data if one of the fol­lowing con­di­tions is met:

the accuracy of the per­sonal data is con­tested by the data subject for a period enabling the con­troller to verify the accuracy of the per­sonal data,
the pro­cessing is unlawful and the data subject refuses the erasure of the per­sonal data and instead requests the restriction of the use of the per­sonal data;
the con­troller no longer needs the per­sonal data for the pur­poses of pro­cessing, but the data subject needs them for the estab­lishment, exercise or defence of legal claims, or
the data subject has objected to the pro­cessing pur­suant to Article 21(1) of the GDPR, as long as it has not yet been determined whether the legit­imate grounds of the con­troller override those of the data subject.
Where pro­cessing has been restricted in accordance with the above con­di­tions, such per­sonal data shall be pro­cessed, apart from being stored, only with the consent of the data subject or for the estab­lishment, exercise or defence of legal claims or for the pro­tection of the rights of another natural or legal person or for reasons of sub­stantial public interest of the Union or of a Member State.

To exercise the right to restrict pro­cessing, the data subject may contact us at any time using the contact details provided above.

(7) Right to data port­ab­ility

You have the right to receive the per­sonal data con­cerning you that you have provided to us in a struc­tured, com­monly used and machine-readable format, and you have the right to transmit this data to another con­troller without hindrance from the con­troller to whom the per­sonal data was provided, provided that:

the pro­cessing is based on consent pur­suant to Article 6(1)(a) or Article 9(2)(a) or on a con­tract pur­suant to Article 6(1)(b) of the GDPR; and
die Ver­arbeitung mithilfe auto­mat­is­ierter Ver­fahren erfolgt.
when exer­cising the right to data port­ab­ility in accordance with para­graph 1, you have the right to have the per­sonal data trans­ferred dir­ectly from one con­troller to another con­troller where this is tech­nically feasible. The exercise of the right to data port­ab­ility is without pre­judice to the right to erasure (“right to be for­gotten”). This right shall not apply to pro­cessing necessary for the per­formance of a task carried out in the public interest or in the exercise of official authority vested in the con­troller.

(8) Right of objection

You have the right to object at any time, on grounds relating to your par­ticular situ­ation, to the pro­cessing of per­sonal data con­cerning you which is carried out on the basis of Article 6(1)(e) or (f) DSGVO; this also applies to pro­filing based on these pro­vi­sions. The con­troller shall no longer process the per­sonal data unless it can demon­strate com­pelling legit­imate grounds for the pro­cessing which override the interests, rights and freedoms of the data subject, or for the estab­lishment, exercise or defence of legal claims.

If per­sonal data are pro­cessed for the purpose of direct mar­keting, you have the right to object at any time to the pro­cessing of per­sonal data con­cerning you for the purpose of such mar­keting; this also applies to pro­filing insofar as it is related to such direct mar­keting. If you object to the pro­cessing for direct mar­keting pur­poses, the per­sonal data will no longer be pro­cessed for these pur­poses.

In the context of the use of inform­ation society ser­vices, not­with­standing Dir­ective 2002/58/EC, you may exercise your right to object by means of auto­mated pro­cedures using tech­nical spe­cific­a­tions.

You have the right to object, on grounds relating to your par­ticular situ­ation, to the pro­cessing of per­sonal data con­cerning you which is carried out for sci­entific or his­torical research pur­poses or for stat­istical pur­poses pur­suant to Article 89(1), unless the pro­cessing is necessary for the per­formance of a task carried out in the public interest.

You can exercise the right to object at any time by con­tacting the respective person responsible.

(9) Auto­mated decisions in indi­vidual cases including pro­filing

You have the right not to be subject to a decision based solely on auto­mated pro­cessing, including pro­filing, which pro­duces legal effects con­cerning you or sim­ilarly sig­ni­fic­antly affects you. This does not apply if the decision:

is necessary for the con­clusion or per­formance of a con­tract between the data subject and the data con­troller,
is authorised by Union or Member State legis­lation to which the con­troller is subject and that legis­lation con­tains appro­priate measures to safe­guard the rights and freedoms and legit­imate interests of the data subject; or
takes place with the express consent of the data subject.
The con­troller shall take reas­onable steps to safe­guard the rights and freedoms as well as the legit­imate interests of the data subject, which include at least the right to obtain the inter­vention of a person on the part of the con­troller, to express his or her point of view and to contest the decision.

The data subject may exercise this right at any time by con­tacting the respective data con­troller.

(10) Right to com­plain to a super­visory authority

They shall also have the right, without pre­judice to any other admin­is­trative or judicial remedy, to lodge a com­plaint with a super­visory authority, in par­ticular in the Member State of their res­idence, place of work or the place of the alleged infringement, if the data subject con­siders that the pro­cessing of per­sonal data relating to them infringes this Reg­u­lation.

(11) Right to an effective judicial remedy

Without pre­judice to any available admin­is­trative or non-judicial remedy, including the right to lodge a com­plaint with a super­visory authority pur­suant to Article 77 of the GDPR, you shall have the right to an effective judicial remedy if you con­sider that your rights under this Reg­u­lation have been infringed as a result of the pro­cessing of your per­sonal data not in com­pliance with this Regulation.

Change Set­tings

History of Settings

Revoke con­sents