Privacy & Cookies

One Hit Pixel are strongly committed to protecting the privacy of users of this website, and do all that it can to protect user information. Any information you provide will be held securely and in accordance with the Data Protection Act 1998. Your personal details will not be disclosed to third parties.

Cookies

In accordance with the new EU directive on cookies, we have documented our use of cookies to provide you, our reader, a clear understanding of what information we utilise. You can read the ICO report on the new law here.

Please note that by using or logging into One Hit Pixel you are complying with our cookie use.

To make this site simpler, small data files are placed on your computer. These are known as cookies. Most big websites do this too.

They improve things by remembering settings, so you don’t have to keep re-entering them whenever you visit a new page and measuring how you use the website so we can make sure it meets your needs. Our cookies aren’t used to identify you personally. They’re just here to make the site work better for you. Indeed, you can manage and/or delete these small files as you wish. To learn more about cookies and how to manage them, visit AboutCookies.org.

First Party Cookies

These are cookies that are set by this website directly.

We use Google Analytics to collect information about how people use this site. We do this to make sure it’s meeting its users’ needs and to understand how we could do it better. Google Analytics stores information about what pages you visit, how long you are on the site, how you got here and what you click on. We do not collect or store your personal information (e.g. your name or address) so this information cannot be used to identify who you are.

There are also cookies that store basic data on your interactions with WordPress, the CMS running this website, and whether you have logged into WordPress.

Third Party Cookies

These are cookies set on your machine by external websites whose services are used on this site. Cookies of this type are the sharing buttons across the site allow visitors to share content onto social networks. Cookies are currently set by Twitter, Facebook and the Share system. If you want to prevent sites setting third party cookies, instructions to do so are here.