COOKIES POLICY

This document is integrated into the MYETV Privacy Policy

USE OF COOKIES AND GENERAL THIRD PARTY POLICIES

This site uses secure cookies for saving information, cookies are stored on your computer and will contain secure encrypted information for automatic accessAccess [the simple access to a website as a visitor] to the site (where requested by the user with the “Remember me” option) or any information about the display of the advertisements or technical information about viewing any part of the platform-[Platform]: [the the set of the main domain and all the subdomain of a particular website; also the computer architecture and equipment using a particular operating system]. For correct access to the site, it is necessary to enable the use of cookies in the browser used. In the event that cookies are deleted by the user, the site will behave as if the cookie had never existed. Cookies are also used on the site for anonymous authentication and can read information on the computers of unregistered users. We will not purchase / sell / export or provide anonymous user data to third parties; the cookie data are stored on your computer and you have complete controls over them. By using this website you accept this use of cookies. Sometimes we will use a combination of new techniques with cookies, html5 and server-side sessions and with encryption-[Encryption]: [to change electronic information or signals into a secret code (= system of letters, numbers, or symbols) that people cannot understand or use on normal equipment] to obfuscate the information within the cookie to others.

Privacy policy for third-party cookies that can be used within https://www.myetv.tv. By nature our platform uses user-generated content-[Contents]: [every content intended as text, images, audio or video] and therefore it is not possible to list all the possible cookies that can be saved by browsing the user-generated content, unless you browse the “Cookies Manager of MYTEV“; we use cookies with caution, below is a list of cookies that can be used and from which website:

TECHNICAL COOKIES
(from the exact domain or subdomain)

AUTHENTICATION COOKIES AND/OR TRACKING COOKIES
(secure cookie only for connections from the exact domain)

ADVERTISING COOKIES
(from myetv.tv domains)

THIRD PARTIES ADVERTISING COOKIES
We may use third parties cookies, such as advertising networks and exchanges, to allow us to serve you advertisements. These third-party ad networks and exchange providers may use third-party cookies, web beacons, or similar technologies to collect information about your visit to our site and elsewhere on the Internet. They may also collect your device identifier, IP address, or identifier for advertising. The information that these third parties collect may be used to provide you with more relevant advertising on our sites or elsewhere on the web.
For more information on third-party advertising-related cookies, interest-based advertising, and how to opt-out of that practice by companies participating in industry self-regulation, please visit the relevant website below based on your country of origin:

THIRD PARTIES COOKIES FOR GENERAL PURPOSE

COOKIES MANAGER OF MYETV

Lastly you can manage, view and completely delete all the informations about cookies from MYETV in the cookies dashboard, inside the website, as Anonymous or logged user under “SETTINGS – COOKIES MANAGER” in the main menu (the left sidebar) or directly with this link: https://www.myetv.tv/?CallAction=cookiesmanager.


Cookies are small files which are stored on a user’s computer. They are designed to hold a modest amount of data specific to a particular client and website, and can be accessed either by the web server or the client computer. This allows the server to deliver a page tailored to a particular user, or the page itself can contain some script which is aware of the data in the cookie and so is able to carry information from one visit to the website (or related site) to the next.

Are Cookies Enabled in my Browser?

To check whether your browser is configured to allow cookies, visit the Cookie checker. This page will attempt to create a cookie and report on whether or not it succeeded.

For information on how to enable or disable cookies, see ‘Enabling cookies‘.

For information on how to delete and clear cookies, see ‘Deleting cookies‘.

Can I see/view the cookies I have on my computer?

Most browsers have a configuration screen which allows the user to see what cookies have been stored on the computer, and optionally to delete them. For more information, see the viewing cookies page.

Note that it is not possible for a webpage to view cookies set by other sites, as this would represent a privacy and security problem.

Each cookie is effectively a small lookup table containing pairs of (key, data) values – for example (firstname, John) (lastname, Smith). Once the cookie has been read by the code on the server or client computer, the data can be retrieved and used to customise the web page appropriately.

When are Cookies Created?

Writing data to a cookie is usually done when a new webpage is loaded – for example after a ‘submit’ button is pressed the data handling page would be responsible for storing the values in a cookie. If the user has elected to disable cookies then the write operation will fail, and subsequent sites which rely on the cookie will either have to take a default action, or prompt the user to re-enter the information that would have been stored in the cookie.

Why are Cookies Used?

Cookies are a convenient way to carry information from one session on a website to another, or between sessions on related websites, without having to burden a server machine with massive amounts of data storage. Storing the data on the server without using cookies would also be problematic because it would be difficult to retrieve a particular user’s information without requiring a login-[Login]: [an act of logging in to a computer, database, website or system] on each visit to the website.

If there is a large amount of information to store, then a cookie can simply be used as a means to identify a given user so that further related information can be looked up on a server-side database. For example the first time a user visits a site they may choose a username which is stored in the cookie, and then provide data such as password, name, address, preferred font size, page layout, etc. – this information would all be stored on the database using the username as a key. Subsequently when the site is revisited the server will read the cookie to find the username, and then retrieve all the user’s information from the database without it having to be re-entered.

The time of expiry of a cookie can be set when the cookie is created. By default the cookie is destroyed when the current browser window is closed, but it can be made to persist for an arbitrary length of time after that.

Who Can Access Cookies?

When a cookie is created it is possible to control its visibility by setting its ‘root domain’. It will then be accessible to any URL belonging to that root. For example the root could be set to “whatarecookies.com” and the cookie would then be available to sites in “www.whatarecookies.com” or “xyz.whatarecookies.com” or “whatarecookies.com”. This might be used to allow related pages to ‘communicate’ with each other. It is not possible to set the root domain to ‘top level’ domains such as ‘.com’ or ‘.co.uk’ since this would allow widespread access to the cookie.

By default cookies are visible to all paths in their domains, but at the time of creation they can be retricted to a given subpath – for example “www.whatarecookies.com/images”.

How Secure are Cookies?

There is a lot of concern about privacy and security on the internet. Cookies do not in themselves present a threat to privacy, since they can only be used to store information that the user has volunteered or that the web server already has. Whilst it is possible that this information could be made available to specific third party websites, this is no worse than storing it in a central database. If you are concerned that the information you provide to a webserver will not be treated as confidential then you should question whether you actually need to provide that information at all.

What are Tracking Cookies?

Some commercial websites include embedded advertising material which is served from a third-party site, and it is possible for such adverts to store a cookie for that third-party site, containing information fed to it from the containing site – such information might include the name of the site, particular products being viewed, pages visited, etc. When the user later visits another site containing a similar embedded advert from the same third-party site, the advertiser will be able to read the cookie and use it to determine some information about the user’s browsing history. This enables publishers to serve adverts targetted at a user’s interests, so in theory having a greater chance of being relevant to the user. However, many people see such ‘tracking cookies’ as an invasion of privacy since they allow an advertiser to build up profiles of users without their consent or knowledge.
(with courtesy of whatarecookies.com)

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