Privacy Statement

Pure Hacking is committed to safeguarding your privacy online. Please read the following statement to understand how your personal information will be treated as you make full use of the Pure Hacking Web site.

If you have any questions regarding our privacy statement, please feel free to contact us by e-mail at info@purehacking.com.

Cookies
Pure Hacking uses generic Google cookies on this web site.

Browser Level Information
Pure Hacking Web servers automatically collect information about a site user's IP address, browser type and referrer by reading this information from the user's browser (information provided by every user's browser). This information is collected in a database and used, in an aggregated, anonymous manner, in our internal analysis of traffic patterns within our Web site. This information is automatically logged by most Web sites.

Use of Information
Our primary goal in collecting user information is to enhance your experience on our Web site. To develop content targeted to user interests, we use aggregated user information to determine which areas of our Web site users prefer based upon traffic to those areas. We do not track what individual users read, but instead how well each page or content area performs overall.

Pure Hacking is a free Web site and derive no revenues from advertising.

How to Contact Us
If you have any questions regarding our privacy statement, please feel free to contact us by e-mail at info@purehacking.com.

Definitions

IP Address
Every computer connected to the Internet has a numeric address called an `IP address'. This may or may not correspond uniquely to a particular computer. In some cases, IP addresses can be resolved to host names, which may indicate a site visitor's Internet service provider, employer, university, etc. As part of its database analysis Pure Hacking resolves IP addresses to host names.

Browser Type
A user's browser is a software program running on a computer that allows users to access documents on the World Wide Web. Browsers can be either text or graphic. They read HTML coded pages that reside on a server and interpret the coding into what the user sees as Web pages. Netscape Navigator and Microsoft Internet Explorer are examples of Web browsers. Browser type typically discloses hardware platform, operating system, and browser software and version.

Cookies
A cookie is a data file that certain Web sites write to your computer's hard drive when you visit such sites. A cookie file can contain information, such as a user identification code, that the site uses to track the pages you have visited.



Business Services
"Pure Hacking distinguish themselves by successfully communicating difficult technical concepts to all levels. They also followed through with their promise to continue support in explaining these concepts long after our contract finished."

IT Manager - Production Systems, International Business Services Corporation