1. What is a cookie?
Cookies are small text files placed on your device when you visit a website. They allow
the site to remember your actions and preferences, recognize you on return visits, and
understand how the site is used. We also use related technologies such as
localStorage and sessionStorage; for simplicity we refer to all
of these as "cookies" in this policy.
2. Categories of cookies we use
2.1 Strictly necessary
Required for the Service to function. They keep you signed in, remember your session, protect the site from abuse, and store core preferences. These cannot be disabled because the Service would not work without them.
- Session cookies — keep you authenticated while signed in.
- CSRF tokens — protect against cross-site request forgery.
- Cookie consent state — remembers your choices on this banner.
2.2 Preferences
Store user-interface preferences such as theme, language and last-used filters. These make the Service more usable but are not essential.
2.3 Analytics
Help us understand how the Service is used in aggregate, so we can improve it. We use privacy-respecting, aggregated analytics and do not sell or share data with advertisers. Analytics cookies are loaded only after you grant consent.
2.4 Marketing
We do not currently set marketing or advertising cookies. If that changes, we will update this policy and request your consent before any are placed.
3. Third parties
Some cookies are set by third-party providers we use to deliver the Service — for example, the authentication and database provider. They process data on our behalf under data processing agreements. See our Privacy Policy for more.
4. How to manage cookies
You can control cookies in several ways:
- Use our consent banner to accept, reject, or customize non-essential categories.
- Adjust your browser settings to block or delete cookies. Note that blocking strictly necessary cookies will break the Service.
- Clear site data from your browser at any time.
Most browsers (Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Edge) provide easy-to-find documentation on how to manage cookies in their privacy settings.
5. Do Not Track
We honour Global Privacy Control (GPC) signals where applicable and treat them as a request to disable non-essential cookies. We do not respond to legacy "Do Not Track" HTTP headers because there is no consistent industry standard.
6. Changes
If we add new cookies or change how existing ones work in ways that affect your privacy, we will update this policy and refresh your consent where required.
7. Contact
Cookies questions: [email protected]. See also our Privacy Policy and Terms & Conditions.