Privacy Policy
How we collect, use, and protect your data.
This policy explains what data The Analytic Post collects, why, and what we do with it. It's written to be read, not to bury important things in legal language. The short version: we collect as little as possible, we don't sell anything, and we don't track you across the web.
What we collect and why
When you visit the site, our web server automatically logs basic technical information — your IP address, browser type, the pages you visited, and the time of your visit. This is standard for any website and is used only to monitor performance and diagnose technical problems. We don't use it to identify you personally.
If you contact us by email, we keep that correspondence. We use it to respond to you. That's it.
If we introduce a newsletter or comment section in the future, we'll update this policy before collecting anything new. You'll be asked to opt in, not quietly enrolled.
We do not run advertising. No ad networks, no tracking pixels, no third-party behavioural profiles built from your reading habits.
Cookies
The site uses only the cookies necessary to make it function. No marketing cookies, no analytics platforms that fingerprint your device, no "personalisation" that follows you around after you leave.
If you see a cookie consent notice, it's because your browser or jurisdiction requires it. You can decline non-essential cookies without losing access to anything on the site.
Some embedded content, a video, an external map, a data visualisation hosted elsewhere, may load its own cookies from that third party. We have no control over those. If that concerns you, most browsers let you block third-party cookies entirely.
Your rights
You can ask us what personal data we hold about you. You can ask us to delete it. If you've emailed us and want that correspondence removed from our records, ask and we'll do it.
We don't share personal data with third parties except where the law requires it. We have not received any such legal demands to date.
If you're in the European Union or the United Kingdom, you have additional rights under GDPR and UK data law respectively, including the right to complain to your national supervisory authority if you believe we've handled your data improperly. We'd rather you contact us first, but that right is yours.
7. Contact
Questions about this policy can be sent here