Cookies
To make this site work properly, we sometimes place small data files called cookies on your device. Most big websites do this too. This documentation is enforced upon us by EU law and includes all details about the cookies, why they exist and how you can control the cookies on your computer.
What are cookies?
Cookies are information that websites (like this one) can create and store on your local computer or whatever device you use to navigate the web. The information includes but are not limited to what you can click on, searches you have made and how you navigate the site.
A site can only access the cookies created by the site itself. However, a site can include scripts from third parties that can create and access cookies they create themselves.
Modern websites uses cookies in a wide variety and disabling them can remove features and make parts of the site inaccessible and not work as intended.
How do we use cookies?
We use cookies to improve the user experience of the website, but also to track the pages you navigate to, what ads you click on and how you interact with our website. The reason is to show more appropriate ads and to be able to get data on how visitors use our website.
We don share the cookie information with third parties but some third parties uses their own cookies on this site. We use tools and advertisement from Google that uses cookies as well. You can read more about how Google uses cookies here.
How to control cookies
You can control and/or delete cookies as you wish for details, see aboutcookies.org. You can delete all cookies that are already on your computer and you can set most browsers to prevent them from being placed. If you do this, however, you may have to manually adjust some preferences every time you visit a site and some services and functionalities may not work.
Web browsers like Chrome, FireFox and Internet Explorer all support private surfing modes that block access to all existing cookies and automatically deletes all new cookies as soon as the browser closes. In Chrome you can use CTRL+SHIFT+N to launch a new window with that mode and in IE you can do the same with CTRL+SHIFT+P.