Cookies Statement
USE OF COOKIES
According to current regulations, Royal Decree-Law 13/2012, of March 30, which modifies article 22.2 of Law 34/2002 of July 11 on Information Society Services and Electronic Commerce (LSSI) establishes that service providers may use data storage and recovery devices on recipients' terminal equipment provided that they have given their consent after having been provided with clear and complete information about their use, in particular about the purposes of data processing, in accordance with the provisions of Organic Law 15/1999, of December 3, on the Protection of Personal Data (…)”.
Cookies are files sent to a browser via a web server to record the User's activities on a specific website.
The Pablosky Website ( www.pablosky.es ) uses "Cookies" and other similar mechanisms (hereinafter, Cookies). The primary purpose of Cookies is to provide the User with faster access to the selected services. In addition, Cookies personalize the services offered by the Pablosky Website, facilitating and offering each User information that is of interest to them or that may be of interest to them, based on their use of its services.
Pablosky's Websites use Cookies to personalize and facilitate the User's navigation as much as possible. Cookies are only associated with an anonymous User and his/her computer and do not provide references that allow the User's personal data to be deduced.
Users may configure their browser to notify and reject the installation of Cookies sent by the Pablosky Website, without affecting the User's ability to access the Contents. However, we would like to point out that, in any case, the quality of the Website's operation may be reduced.
Registered users who register or log in will be able to benefit from more personalized services tailored to their profile, thanks to the combination of data stored in cookies with the personal data used at the time of registration.
These users expressly authorize the use of this information for the stated purpose, without prejudice to their right to reject or disable the use of cookies.
Cookies, depending on their permanence, can be divided into session or permanent cookies.
- The first ones expire when the user closes the browser.
- The latter expire depending on when the purpose for which they are used is fulfilled (for example, so that the user remains identified in Pablosky services) or when they are manually deleted.
Additionally, depending on their purpose, Cookies can be classified as follows:
- Performance Cookies: This type of Cookie remembers your preferences for tools found in the Services, so you do not have to reconfigure the Service each time you visit. For example, cookies that remember items saved in the “shopping cart”
- Registration Cookies: Registration Cookies are generated once the User has registered or subsequently opened their session, and are used to identify the User in the Services for the following purposes:
- Keeping the user identified so that, if the user closes a tab or window of the website, the browser or the computer and at another time or day returns to said tab or window, the user will continue to be identified, thus facilitating navigation without having to identify themselves again. This functionality can be deleted if the user clicks the “close session” function, so that this cookie is deleted and the next time the user enters the service, the user will have to log in to be identified.
- Check whether the user is authorized to access certain services on the website, such as to participate in a contest.
- Unless the user decides to register for a Pablosky Service, the “Cookie” will never be associated with any personal data that could identify the user. These Cookies will only be used for statistical purposes that help to optimize the Users’ experience on the site.
- Analytical Cookies: Every time a User visits a Service, a tool from an external provider (Google Analytics and similar tools that may be added to this list if they change in relation to the current ones) generates an analytical Cookie on the user's computer. This Cookie, which is only generated during the visit, will be used in future visits to Pablosky's Services to anonymously identify the visitor. The main objectives pursued are:
- Allow anonymous identification of browsing Users through the “Cookie” (identifies browsers and devices, not people) and therefore the approximate counting of the number of visitors and their trend over time.
- Anonymously identify the most visited content and therefore the most attractive to Users.
- Know if the user accessing is new or returning.
- Third-party cookies:
- Third-party advertising cookies: These are sent to the user's terminal equipment from a computer or domain that is not managed by the publisher, but by another entity that processes the data obtained through the cookies. The companies that generate these cookies have their own privacy policies.
- Third-party cookies used on the Pablosky website:
- Cookies required for the management of the Ecommerce platform (Magento). These cookies are essential for navigation and are not intended to track user information. For more information, click here .
- Google Analytics and Adwords, analytics, advertising and remarketing cookies. For more information visit http://www.google.es/policies/privacy/ads/#toc-doubleclick and http://www.google.es/policies/privacy/ads/
- Specifically, at a global level and in the member states of the European Union, Google sets the following cookies:
- __utma Cookie:
- A persistent cookie – remains on a computer unless it expires or the cookie cache is cleared. Tracks visitors. Metrics associated with the Google __utma cookie include: first visit (unique visit), last visit (return visit).
- __utmb Cookie & __utmc Cookie:
- These cookies work together to calculate the duration of a visit. Google's __utmb cookie records the exact time of arrival and the __utmc cookie records the exact time of departure of the user. Because the __utmb cookie counts incoming visits, the _utmc cookie is a session cookie and expires at the end of the session, for example when the user leaves the page. A timestamp of 30 minutes must elapse before the __utmc cookie expires. This cookie cannot determine whether a browser or website session has ended. Therefore, if no new page view is recorded within 30 minutes, the cookie will expire.
- __utma Cookie:
- Specifically, at a global level and in the member states of the European Union, Google sets the following cookies:
This is a standard "grace period" in web analytics. Omniture and WebTrends, among many others, follow the same procedure.
- __utmz Cookie – This cookie monitors the HTTP referrer and notes where a visitor came from, with the referrer being of type (search engine (organic or cpc), direct, social, and unaccounted). From the HTTP referrer, the __utmz cookie also records what keyword generated the visit, as well as geolocation data. This cookie lasts for six months. In terms of tracking, this cookie is perhaps the most important as it will tell you about your traffic and help you with conversion information such as what source/medium/keyword to attribute for a goal conversion measurement.
- __utmv Cookie: This is a persistent cookie that lasts "forever". It is used for segmentation, data experimentation and __utmv works hand-in-hand with the __utmz cookie to enhance the cookie's targeting capabilities.
- Procedure to disable cookies.
All modern browsers allow you to change your Cookie settings. These settings are usually found in the 'Options' or 'Preferences' menu of your browser. You can also configure your browser or email client, as well as install free add-ons to prevent websites from being downloaded.
These are the steps to access the cookie configuration menu and, where applicable, private browsing in each of the main browsers:
- Chrome: Tools > Settings > Show Advanced Settings > Content Settings (within the Privacy section) > Check the “Block cookies and data from third-party sites” box > Done
- Internet Explorer: Tools > Internet Options > Privacy > Advanced > Override automatic cookie management > Check both “Block” boxes > OK
- Firefox: Menu > Options > Privacy > Use advanced settings for history > Uncheck the “Accept cookies” box
- Safari: Preferences > Privacy > Cookies and Website Data > Always Block.
d) Consequences of disabling Cookies:
Some features of the services will be disabled, such as remaining logged in, keeping purchases in the “shopping cart” in an e-commerce Service, receiving information targeted to your location or viewing some videos.
The Pablosky Website may modify this Cookie Policy based on legislative or regulatory requirements, or in order to adapt said policy to the instructions issued by the Spanish Data Protection Agency, therefore Users are advised to visit it periodically.