Cookie Policy
We run a deliberately clean site. Here is the short, honest version of what that means for cookies and tracking.
Last updated: 30 June 2026
The short version
This site uses no analytics cookies and no advertising cookies, and it runs no third-party tracking. There is no cookie-consent banner because there is nothing non-essential to consent to. Keeping the site clean is a deliberate choice, not an oversight.
What a cookie is
A cookie is a small file a website can store in your browser. "Site storage" (such as localStorage and sessionStorage) is similar: small pieces of data kept on your device. Both can be used for legitimate, essential purposes — or to track people across the web. We only use the first kind, and only barely.
What we use, precisely
- No analytics. We do not use Google Analytics or any analytics product. We do not measure or profile your behaviour.
- No advertising or tracking cookies. None. No pixels, no remarketing, no data brokers.
- Minimal interface memory. The site may use a little browser storage strictly to remember a small interface choice on your own device — for example, that you have dismissed a notice. This stays on your device, is not sent to us, and is not used to identify or track you.
- Strictly-necessary hosting. Our hosting provider and the contact form may set strictly-necessary cookies needed to serve a page or process a form submission securely. These are not used for tracking.
Third-party content
If you follow a link to a third party — for example LinkedIn, or an external AI assistant linked from the site — that third party may set its own cookies under its own policy once you are on its property. We do not control those and they are not set by us.
Managing cookies and storage
You can clear or block cookies and site storage at any time in your browser settings. Because the site does not depend on tracking, it works the same with them blocked.
Changes and contact
If this ever changes — for instance if we add a genuinely necessary tool — we will update this page and, where the law requires consent, ask for it first. Questions: contact form. See also our Privacy Policy.