Use of Cookies
What cookies are
Cookies are records that our website saves on your device to remember your visit. Your browser stores them when the page loads over HTTP. Some keep you logged in, some help guard your account, and others measure how the site is used or support advertising.
A cookie is saved quietly in the background, without interrupting your visit. Some last only until you close the browser, while others stay until they expire or you delete them yourself. Thanks to the ones that stay, the site recognises you when you return, so you do not retype your username and password each time. Every common browser, such as Opera, Chrome, Firefox, or Edge, lets you manage these files, though the settings sit in a different menu in each one.
Consent to use
What we use the stored data for
The collected cookies show us how a visit unfolds. They record how long a session lasts and how many subpages open, so the pages you come back to are easy to load again. The same files help us check authentication, keep account access safer, and catch faults on the site before a broken page spoils your next visit.
Part of the data measures how well advertising campaigns perform. We also use these signals to spot fraud attempts and adjust the content you see, so repeated visits can match your earlier choices more closely. The whole exchange stays anonymous. Information sent from your device is encrypted and cannot establish your identity.
We use cookies in a controlled way and protect the data they collect according to our privacy rules.
How to limit or delete cookies
Your browser settings contain a section devoted to cookies. From there you can turn off their recording, block new cookies from being saved, or switch on a prompt that asks for consent before each transfer of data.
Turning off cookies may reduce browsing comfort on our site. Some pages may load less smoothly, and certain information may not display as expected.