Cookie Policy
What is a cookie?
A computer "cookie" is more formally known as an HTTP cookie, a web cookie, an Internet cookie, or a browser cookie. The name is a shorter version of “magic cookie,” which is a term for a packet of data that a computer receives, then sends back without changing or altering it. No matter what it’s called, a computer cookie consists of information. When you visit a website, the website sends the cookie to your computer. Your computer stores it in a file located inside your web browser. (To help you find it, this file is often called “Cookies.”)
What are cookies used for?
A website might also use cookies to keep a record of your most recent visit or to record your login information. Many people find this useful so that they can store passwords on commonly used sites, or simply so they know what they have visited or downloaded in the past.
It will be helpful for visitor and users more quick communication, improving their frequent communication and track and helpful to analysis usage, to collect other statistical information to identify visitors interest regarding website.
Types of cookies
Session cookies: Session cookies, also known as 'temporary cookies', help websites recognize users and the information provided when they navigate through a website. Session cookies only retain information about a user's activities for as long as they are on the website. Once the web browser is closed, the cookies are deleted. These are commonly used on shopping websites or e-commerce websites.
Permanent cookies: Permanent cookies, also known as 'persistent cookies', remain in operation even after the web browser has closed. For example they can remember login details and passwords so web users don't need to re-enter them every time they use a site. Permanent cookies will be deleted after 12 months.
Third-party cookies: Third-party cookies are installed by third-parties with the aim of collecting certain information from web users to carry out research into, for example, behaviour, demographics or spending habits. They are commonly used by advertisers who want to ensure that products and services are marketed towards the right target audience.
Flash cookies: Flash cookies, also known as 'super cookies', are independent from the web browser. They are designed to be permanently stored on a user's computer. These types of cookies remain on a user's device even after all cookies have been deleted from their web browser.
Zombie cookies: Zombie cookies are a type of flash cookie that are automatically re-created after a user has deleted them. This means they are difficult to detect or manage. They are often used in online games to prevent users from cheating, but have also been used to install malicious software onto a user's device.
When does place cookies?
Our purpose will use to cookie to improve quality service for our websites, with future technology & mobile related applications with help of any browser visiting our web site, we will receive cookies from them which helps us identify you more quickly when you return.
Cookies will help us to identify which important pages of more special information you find more useful and helpful for you and we can make it more user friendly for them.
may also try to use some cookies for its own online business analysis purpose which may helpful them to improve their website quality service and productivity regarding user expectations. With help of cookies we can generate concerned reports of visitors and their activities on our website to make, to provide more comfortably and user friendly services to them.
How to control & Delete cookies?
Cookies get stored on your computer when you use a web browser. The cookie file gets read by the server on the other end of the connection. Most of the time, cookies are a good thing—without authentication cookies, you'd constantly be entering usernames and passwords as you visit websites, over and over, on every page. Cookies also make it possible for online shopping carts to work without losing all your items before purchase.
How to delete cookies from your Internet browsers with help of computer or mobile manually ?
Google Chrome (Desktop):
Click the three-dot icon menu in the upper-right corner to get the Chrome menu, and select More tools > Clear browsing data. In the pop-up box, check off the third and fourth boxes to delete cookies and clear cached images and files. Just pick a timeframe from the menu at the top.
To manage the cookies in Chrome, type "chrome://settings/content/cookies" in the omnibox (without the quote marks). Tell Chrome to allow data from local sites you actually visit, only keep data until you close the browser, or block cookies altogether. The best option: Block all third-party cookies. You can also set exceptions—if you block all cookies, you might to still allow them
Click See All Cookies and Site Data to see a list of the cookies actually installed locally on your computer. You can go through them one by one and delete as desired. It's not a bad idea to just do a Remove All on cookies every few months, just to clear things out.
Google Chrome (Mobile):
Access the menu via the ellipsis menu in the lower-right (iOS) or upper-right (Android), and select Settings > Privacy > Clear Browsing Data. Check off the section for cookies and tap Clear Browsing Data (iOS) or Clear Data (Android). That's all you can do; you don't get any granular controls over existing cookies (except for selecting a time-frame at the top) and can't block third-party cookies alone.
To manage the cookies in Chrome, type "chrome://settings/content/cookies" in the omnibox (without the quote marks). Tell Chrome to allow data from local sites you actually visit, only keep data until you close the browser, or block cookies altogether. The best option: Block all third-party cookies. You can also set exceptions—if you block all cookies, you might to still allow them for, say, Amazon and NYTimes.com, just so you don't have to re-type your password all the time.
Mozilla Firefox
Click the upper-right hamburger stack and select Options > Privacy & Security. Under Cookies and Site Data, click Clear Data > Cookies and Site Data > Clear to remove your entire cookie history.
Back to Cookies and Site Data, select Manage Data if you want to choose the sites from which to remove cookies. There's also a checkbox to Delete cookies and site data when Firefox is closed. But that may be overkill. Under Manage Exceptions, create Exceptions to always (or never) accept cookies from select sites.
Firefox (Android)
Go to the three-dot menu and select Settings > Privacy > Cookies. You get three choices: Enabled, Enabled Excluding 3rd Party, or Disabled. To erase all cookies, on the Privacy screen, check the box by Clear Private Data on Exit. You'll get another pop-up to pick Cookies & Active Logins, among other settings.
Click See All Cookies and Site Data to see a list of the cookies actually installed locally on your computer. You can go through them one by one and delete as desired. It's not a bad idea to just do a Remove All on cookies every few months, just to clear things out.
Firefox (iOS)
Tap the hamburger menu on the lower-right, select Settings >Tracking Protection. Select Standard or Strict. The latter is basically a private browsing mode.
But for true cookie control, go to Settings > Data Management > Cookies and turn them off. You can Clear Private Data at the bottom of the screen. Or click Website Data at the top to delete cookie data site by site.
Microsoft Edge
Internet Explorer is (mostly) dead, long live Microsoft Edge. To clear cookies, select the three-dot menu and select Settings. Click the hamburger menu on the top left and select Privacy and services. Under Clear browsing data, click Choose what to clear. Some options will be pre-selected; can click or de-select the items you want to delete. Click Clear now. Back under Clear browsing data, you can also choose what gets cleared every time you close the browser.
To manage cookies in the future, scroll up to Tracking Prevention. Choose one of three options: Basic, Balanced, or Strict. You can also see blocked trackers and set exceptions.
Safari (macOS)
By default, Safari is only taking cookies from sites you visit—not third-party cookies. You can make changes by going to the Safari menu (a gear icon) and selecting Preferences > Privacy and looking under Cookies and website data > Manage Website Data. From there, pick the sites whose cookies you crush; click Remove All > Remove Now to kill all cookies.
If you'd like to manage how Safari handles cookies, look for the option to Block All Cookies on that same Privacy tab.
To manage the cookies Safari will accept, click any site under Cookies and Website data to have Safari ask sites and third parties not to track you. Safari may ask on your behalf every time, but it's up to individual websites whether they'll comply or not.
Safari (iOS)
With Safari, you don't access the cookie settings by opening the browser itself. In iOS, go to Settings > Safari and toggle Block All Cookies to on.
To kill all cookies, choose Clear History and Website Data. To kill only select cookie data stored by websites (and keep your History), scroll down to Advanced > Website Data.
You'll get a list of the sites storing the most data; at the bottom of the list click Show All Sites to see the full list. Delete the data for sites you don't recognize or trust by swiping left; you'll sleep better. Clear them all by clicking Remove All Website Data at the bottom.
Thank you for reading this information carefully.