Privacy and cookies
Cookies
Cookies make your visit to this site smoother – but we don’t collect any personal information about you by means of those cookies.
This site uses WordPress cookies to make your visit easier (they may appear tagged as ‘wordpress’…, ‘wp’…, or ‘themify…’). The \’cookies-enabled\’ cookie notes whether cookies have been enabled by you. A cookie starting with \’__cfduid…\’, if present, is used by CloudFlare to deliver site pages faster. Google also deposits cookies as part of its Analytics service (see next section), and there are two corresponding Analytics plugins which may create cookies as well (‘_ga…’, ‘_gid…’ and / or ‘_gadwp…’). \’PHPSESSID…\’ is an identifier for the current browser session, and helps to make some pages behave differently on first or subsequent visit to that page during the session.
Contact
If you contact us using the Contact page we get the email address you entered on the form. We will use your email to respond to you. We will not share your contact info.
Analytics etc.
The site uses Google Analytics as an aid to see how the site is performing, what pages get the most visits, etc. Google Analytics uses a user’s IP address (which looks something like ‘183.23.31.220’) to count visits and visitors. This IP address is anonymous as far as we are concerned (it’s not supplied to us by Google), and we get no information identifying users from Analytics.
All web hosting services are required to keep logs of any site activity, and these logs are held on the server of the hosting service. The information held includes IP addresses. Your IP address may be relatively fixed, or it may vary a lot; most people’s IP address changes from time to time, and IP addresses are often shared by a number of users at a single location – e.g., a workplace or house.
Retention
Most cookies on this site expire with the end of the user’s session. Google Analytics cookies appear to persist for about 2 years. The CloudFlare cookie lasts around 4 months. Emails (if you contact us) probably hang around in our mail program for a few years. Internet Service Providers retain logs of IP addresses indefinitely.