1. What cookies are
Cookies are small text files stored on your browser or device when you visit a website. They may be set by the site you are visiting (“first-party” cookies) or by a third party whose service is embedded on the page (“third-party” cookies). They can be “session” cookies, removed when you close your browser, or “persistent” cookies, which remain until they expire or you delete them.
2. How we group cookies
We classify the cookies we may use into three categories:
- Strictly necessary — essential for the site to function, including remembering that you have responded to our cookie banner.
- Preference — optional cookies that store non-essential settings, such as a chosen display language if we add localisation.
- Analytics — optional cookies that help us understand how visitors use the site. Data is aggregated and does not identify you personally.
3. The cookies we currently use
We keep our cookie footprint minimal. At present, only the strictly necessary cookies listed below are active.
- ms-cookie-consent (first-party, persistent, 12 months) — records your cookie banner choice so we do not ask on every visit.
- PHPSESSID (first-party, session) — created when you submit the contact form and cleared when you close your browser. It carries no personal information.
We do not currently load third-party analytics, advertising or social tracking scripts. If we add any in future, the banner will list them explicitly and request a fresh decision before they load.
4. Managing your choices
On your first visit you can accept all cookies, reject non-essential cookies, or open the customise panel for a granular choice. To change your decision later, clear site data for marketstrike.life in your browser settings and reload the page — the banner will appear again.
Most browsers also let you block or delete cookies through their privacy settings. Blocking strictly necessary cookies may prevent parts of the site from working correctly, including the cookie banner and form submissions that rely on session tracking.
5. Do Not Track signals
Some browsers send a “Do Not Track” header with each request. Because industry practice around this signal is not yet uniform, we do not rely on it. Our cookie banner remains the primary way to record your preference and gives you a clear choice for each category.
6. Changes to this policy
We may update this policy from time to time. The “last updated” date at the top will change accordingly. Where updates are material we will show the banner again so you can review the revised list.
7. Contact
Cookie-related questions may be sent to [email protected]. For broader information about personal data, please read our privacy policy.