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We are
committed to protecting your privacy. The sites that we control
will only use the information that we collect about you
lawfully.
If you visit
one of our sites to browse, or to read or download information
like articles, reviews or current events:
We collect and
store general information: the name of the domain and host from
which you access the Internet (for example, aol.com or
princeton.edu); the Internet protocol (IP) address of the
computer you are using; the browser software you use and your
operating system; the date and time you access our site; and the
Internet address of the website from which you linked directly
to our site. We hold this information securely in accordance
with the law.
We use this
information to measure the number of visitors to the different
sections of our site, and to help us make our site more useful.
Generally, we delete this information after one year.
We currently do
not collect email and will not e-mail you in the future unless
you have given us your consent. If given consent, we will give
you the chance to refuse any marketing email from us or from
another trader in the future.
We do not
collect personal or sensitive information about you without your
explicit consent. We may use technology to track the patterns of
behavior of visitors to our site. This can include using a
cookie* which would be stored on your browser. You can usually
modify your browser to prevent this from happening. We use these
cookies to enhance your experience when you visit our sites and
to prevent you from viewing advertisements that you already
viewed or may not be interested in viewing.
If you have any
questions/comments about privacy, please contact us.
* A "cookie" is
a small text file that a website can place on your computer's
hard drive in order, for example, to collect information about
your activities on the site or to make it possible for you to
use an online "shopping cart" to keep track of items you wish to
purchase. The cookie transmits this information back to the Web
site's computer, which, generally speaking, is the only computer
that can read it. Most consumers do not know that "cookies" are
being placed on their computers when they visit websites. If you
want to know when this happens, or to prevent it from happening,
you can set your browser to warn you when a website attempts to
place a "cookie" on your computer.
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