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Rummage Wisconsin.com and The Wisconsin Network.com
Privacy Policy
Children
should always get permission from their parents before sending
any information about themselves (such as their names, Email
addresses, and phone numbers) over the Internet, to us or to
anyone else. We won't knowingly allow anyone under 13 to register
with any of our site forms or to access those features that
require registration.
The
information gathered by Rummage Wisconsin.com and The Wisconsin Network.com falls into two categories:
(1) information voluntarily supplied by visitors to our web sites
through optional registration and (2) tracking information gathered
as visitors navigate through our sites.
To
make use of certain features on our web sites (such as ad forms
and online auction) visitors need to register and to provide certain
information as part of the registration process. (We may ask, for
example, for your name, e-mail address, and zip code, and we might
request information on your interest in sports, personal finance,
the performing arts, and the like.) The information you supply will
help us to offer you more personalized features, to tailor our sites
to your interests and make them more useful to you.
The
more you tell us about yourself, the more value we can offer you.
Supplying such information is entirely voluntary. But if you don't
supply the information we need, we may be unable to provide you
with services we make available to other visitors to our sites.
For example, we can't send you e-mail alerting you to a new service
we're offering, or breaking news that may interest you if you don't
tell us what you're interested in and give us your e-mail address.
Similarly, we can't notify you that you've been lucky enough to
win a prize in a promotional contest if we don't know how to contact
you.
Of
course, even if you want to remain completely anonymous, you're
still free to take advantage of the wealth of content available
on our sites without registration.
To
help make our sites more responsive to the needs of our visitors,
we invoke a standard feature of browser software, called a "cookie," to
assign each visitor a unique, random number, a sort of user ID,
if you will, that resides on your computer. The cookie doesn't
actually identify the visitor, just the computer that a visitor
uses to access our site. Unless you voluntarily identify yourself
(through registration, for example), we won't know who you are,
even if we assign a cookie to your computer. The only personal
information a cookie can contain is information you supply. A
cookie can't read data off your hard drive. Our advertisers may
also assign their own cookies to your browser, a process that
we don't control.
We
use cookies to help us tailor our site to your needs, to deliver
a better, more personalized service. It is a cookie, for example,
that allows us to deliver your personalized stock quotes each time
you visit a site, even if you've been away for awhile. And we use
cookies to avoid showing you the same ad, repeatedly, during a single
visit. In addition, we may use cookies to track the pages on our
sites visited by our users. We can build a better site if we know
which pages our users are visiting and how often. Of course, you
can set your browser not to accept cookies, but if you do, you may
not be able to take advantage of the personalized features enjoyed
by other visitors to our sites.
Our
web server automatically collect limited information about your
computer's connection to the Internet, including your IP address,
when you visit our sites. (Your IP address is a number that lets
computers attached to the Internet know where to send you data --
such as the web pages you view.) Your IP address does not identify
you personally. We use this information to deliver our web pages
to you upon request, to tailor our sites to the interests of our
users, and to measure traffic within our sites.
A
final note: The Web is an evolving medium. If we need to change
our privacy policy at some point in the future, we'll post the changes
before they take effect.
Of
course, our use of information gathered while the current policy
is in effect will always be consistent with the current policy,
even if we change that policy later.
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