We are committed to protecting your privacy. We will
collect and use information supplied by you and other users of the Website to
improve the Website and personalize Your experience when you visit the Website.
We may also use it to tell you about changes in our services or about features
we think you will find interesting. We will not sell, trade or rent your personal
information.
Data
Protection Act 1998
Under the Data Protection Act we follow strict
security procedures in the storage and disclosure of information which you have
given us, to prevent unauthorized access.
We use cookies on our websites. A cookie is a small text
file written to your hard drive that contains information about you. Cookies do
not contain any personal information about users. Once you close your browser,
the cookie simply terminates. We use cookies so that we can personalize Your
experience of the website and to monitor website usage. If you set up your
browser to reject the cookie, you may still use the website. Some of our
business partners use cookies on our site (for example, advertisers). We have no
access to or control over these cookies.
In the event that we are sold or integrated with another
business your details will not be disclosed to our advisers and any prospective
purchasers' advisers and will be passed on to the new owners of the business.
We may modify these terms and conditions at any time by
publishing the modified terms and conditions on the website. Any modifications
shall take effect 3 days after posting on the website. These terms are to be
governed by and construed in accordance with Internet law. Any disputes shall be
subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the courts.
Information on compliance with and
applicability of the CAN-SPAM act
The CAN-SPAM Act regulates commercial email, which is defined as any email
message "the primary purpose of which is the commercial advertisement or
promotion of a commercial product or service." A "transactional or relationship
message" - email that facilitates an agreed-upon transaction or updates a
customer in an existing business relationship - may not contain false or
misleading routing information, but otherwise is exempt from most provisions of
the CAN-SPAM act.
Any emails that are advertisements or solicitations must include the following:
Clear and conspicuous identification that the
message is an advertisement or solicitation (unless the recipient has given
prior affirmative consent to receipt of the message);
Clear and conspicuous notice of the opportunity to
decline to receive further email from the sender, i.e., an "opt-out" or
unsubscribe option; and [If you receive an opt-out request, you have 10
days to stop sending email to the requester's email address.]
A valid physical postal address of the sender.
The CAN-SPAM Act does not provide for a private
right of action (cf. unsolicited fax violation) as only the FTC, State
Attorneys General and Internet Service Providers can sue violators.
The CAN-SPAM Act makes it
unlawful for a person to promote, or allow the promotion of, that person's trade
or business, if that person knows, or should have known in the ordinary course
of that person's trade or business, that the goods were being promoted in such a
message and took no reasonable action to prevent the transmission.