Company: SLDE
Filing Date: 2025-05-23
Form Type: S-1
Source: 0001193125-25-125836
Chunk: 64

Company: Slide Insurance Holdings, Inc.
Filing Date: 2025-05-23
Form: S-1
Chunk 64
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 that such third parties
only process personal data according to agreed-upon instructions,

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and that they have sufficient and appropriate technical and organizational security measures in place. There is no assurance that these measures and our own data privacy and security-related
safeguards will protect data, including personal information from the risks associated with the third-party access, processing, storage and transmission of such information. Any violation of data or security laws by such suppliers could have a
material adverse effect on our business and result in fines and penalties including those outlined below.

In the United States, various
laws and regulations apply to the collection, processing, disclosure and security of certain types of data, including the Federal Trade Commission Act, and state equivalents, the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (“GLBA”), the Telephone Consumer
Protection Act and various state laws relating to privacy and data security, including the CCPA. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission (the “FTC”), many state attorneys general and many courts interpret the various existing federal and state
data privacy and consumer protection laws, and enforce various standards for the collection, disclosure, process, use, storage and security of data, including personal data. State laws are changing rapidly and there is discussion in Congress of a
new comprehensive federal data protection law to which we would become subject if it is enacted, which may add additional complexity, variation in requirements, restrictions and potential legal risks, require additional investment of resources in
compliance programs, impact strategies and the availability of previously useful data, and could result in increased compliance costs or changes in business practices and policies.

The CCPA increases privacy rights for California residents and imposes obligations on companies that process personal information about such
residents, including an obligation to provide certain new disclosures and provide new consumer rights to such residents. As a result, the CCPA imposes corresponding obligations on covered businesses, relating to the access to, deletion of and
sharing of personal information collected by covered businesses, including California residents’ right to access and delete personal information about them, opt out of certain sharing and sales of such personal information and receive detailed
information about how such personal information is used. The law exempts from certain requirements of the CCPA certain personal information that is collected, processed, sold or disclosed pursuant to the California Financial Information Privacy Act
(“CFIPA”), the GLBA or the federal Driver’s Privacy Protection Act (“DPPA”). Also, the definition of “personal information” in the CCPA is broad and may encompass other information that we maintain