What are cookies?
Cookies are small text files that are stored by the browser (for example, Google Chrome or Safari) on your computer, mobile phone or tablet. You can think of cookies as a way of our site remembering who you are and what you like.
How does the Evolve Politics website use cookies?
A visit to any page on Evolve Politics‘ website may generate the following types of cookie:
- Preference cookies
- Anonymous analytics cookies
- Advertising cookies
- Third party cookies
Preference cookies
This type of cookie remembers your preferences for services found on the website. e.g.
- preference to see the desktop site on your mobile
- volume settings for our video player
- video streaming speeds that are compatible with your browser
Anonymous analytics cookies:
Visits to our website cause software provided by another organisation to generate an ‘anonymous analytics cookie’. These cookies can tell us whether or not you have visited the site before, pages that you have visited and how long you viewed them. Your browser will tell us if you have these cookies and, if you don’t, we generate new ones. This allows us to track how many individual users we have, and how often they visit the site so that we can identify trends and improve our content.
Advertising cookies
Advertising cookies allow us, or our advertising providers, to know whether or not you’ve seen an advert or a type of advert, and how long it is since you’ve seen it. We use these, along with cookies set by another organisation, so we can more accurately target advertising. These cookies are anonymous and store only information about what you are looking at on our site, or others, but not about who you are. We also set anonymous cookies on certain other sites that we advertise on. If you receive one of those cookies, we may then use it to identify you as having visited that site if you later visit Evolve Politics. We can then target our advertising based on this information.
Third party cookies
On some pages of our website, other organisations may also set their own anonymous cookies. They do this to track the success of their application, or to customise the application for you. Because of how cookies work, our website cannot access these cookies, nor can the other organisation access the data in cookies we use on our website. For example, when you share an article using Facebook on Evolve Politics, Facebook may record that you have done so.
Opt Out
In order to keep Evolve Politics free, we use third party cookies and other technology to tailor advertising services to you. This technology can include the collection of personal data. You can configure which of our third-party services you wish to opt out of by using the online Web Choices tool:
Web Choice Tool: Click here to Opt Out of Third Party Cookies
We also make use of the following additional services which have their own opt-out method. To opt-out of these services, please use the provided tools:
Google Analytics: Opt Out