Aggrandise.com does not use your name, address, email address, or phone number to deliver Internet ads, spam email, snail mail or telephone marketing. Nor will we pass on your contact details to third parties.


Cookies
A cookie is a file created by an Internet site to store information on your computer, such as your preferences when visiting that site. For example, if you inquire about a flight schedule at an airline's Web site, the site might create a cookie that contains your itinerary. Or it might only contain a record of the pages you looked at within the site you visited, to help the site customize the view for you the next time you visit.
Cookies can also store personally identifiable information.


Personally identifiable information is information that can be used to identify or contact you, such as your name, e-mail address, home or work address, or telephone number. However, a Web site only has access to the personally identifiable information that you provide. For example, a Web site cannot determine your e-mail name unless you provide it. Also, a Web site cannot gain access to other information on your computer.


Once a cookie is saved on your computer, only the Web site that created the cookie can read it.
Internet Explorer allows the use of cookies; however, you can change your privacy settings to specify that Internet Explorer prompt you before placing a cookie on your computer (this enables you to allow or block the cookie); or you can prevent Internet Explorer from accepting any cookies.


You can use the Internet Explorer privacy settings to specify how you want Internet Explorer to handle cookies from individual Web sites or all Web sites. You can also customize your privacy settings by importing a file containing custom privacy settings, or by specifying custom privacy settings for all Web sites or individual Web sites.
Privacy settings only apply to Web sites in the Internet zone


Aggrandise.com third-party tracking
A third-party cookie either originates on or is sent to a Web site different from the one you are currently viewing. Third-party Web sites usually provide some content on the Web site you are viewing. For example, many sites use advertising from third-party Web sites and those third-party Web sites may use cookies

 
A common use for this type of cookie is to track your Web page use for advertising or other marketing purposes.
To alter privacy settings:
Open your browser window
Tools > Internet Options > Privacy
 


 

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