Privacy

The use of our website is generally possible without providing personal data. Insofar as personal data (for example name, address or e-mail addresses) is collected on our pages, this is done on a voluntary basis. This data will not be passed on to third parties without your express consent.
We point out that data transmission over the Internet (eg communication by e-mail) security gaps. A complete protection of the data against access by third parties is not possible.
The use of contact data published within the framework of the imprint obligation by third parties for the purpose of sending unsolicited advertising and information materials is hereby expressly prohibited. 


Google Analytics
This website uses Google Analytics, a web analytics service provided by Google, Inc ("Google"). Google Analytics uses "cookies", which are text files placed on your computer, to help the website analyze how users use the site. The information generated by the cookie about your use of the website (including your IP address) will be transmitted to and stored by Google on servers in the United States. Google will use this information for the purpose of evaluating your use of the website, compiling reports on website activity for website operators and providing other services relating to website activity and internet usage. Google may also transfer this information to third parties where required to do so by law, or where such third parties process the information on Google's behalf. Google will not associate your IP address with any other data held by Google. You may refuse the use of cookies by selecting the appropriate settings on your browser, however please note that if you do this you may not be able to use the full functionality of this website. By using this website, you consent to the processing of data about you by Google in the manner and for the purposes set out above.

 

About cookies

What are cookies?
Cookies are small text files that make the Internet work. When a user is on the Internet and calls up a website, the cookie is sent to the browser together with the requested website - usually by the website operator. The browser is an access program for the home computer with which the World Wide Web can be used. Well-known browsers are, for example, Mozilla Firefox or Internet Explorer.

 
What can cookies?
Cookies make it possible, for example, to fill your shopping cart when shopping online without having to identify yourself as the same customer on every subpage of a retailer. The same applies to online banking: here, too, the user is "recognized" with the help of cookies. Cookies can also store the font size or language in which a web page should appear. With the help of some cookies, however, it is also possible to track the Internet user's surfing behavior, i.e. to analyze which websites he or she has visited.
 
How do cookies work?
When a website is visited, the cookie is stored in the browser. If the user visits the same website again later, the browser sends the small text file back to the website. The website can recognize the values stored in the cookie and then knows, for example, that there are still a pair of pants, a shirt and a belt in the shopping cart. With the help of cookies, a user can therefore be recognized in the broadest sense - not specifically as Tim Müller or Susanne Meier, but as the person in whose browser the cookie in question was stored.
 
Who sets cookies?
Cookies are set by the providers of the websites - but also by third parties, for example advertising companies. These prefer to set so-called tracking cookies, which often remain in the browser for years and are used to assign the various websites visited to a user. Advertising companies can create far-reaching profiles from this information: What does the user look at on the Internet? What are his interests? What is he looking for?
 
Why is the surfing behavior of users analyzed?
Based on the information collected with tracking cookies, website providers and advertising companies can create comprehensive user profiles. The aim is to tailor the advertising displayed in the browser to the user's preferences. What many Internet users don't realize is that the advertising they see is not the same for all website visitors. While one person is presented with vacation offers, another may see an ad for baby food - depending on which website the user has previously visited.
 
How long do cookies stay?
Website providers and advertising companies provide the cookies with an expiration date. The limited lifetime is an important property of the cookie, because it determines how long the cookie remains stored in the browser by itself and how long the user or the browser remains recognizable. So-called session cookies are automatically deleted after the user ends the Internet session - for example, shopping or banking - and closes the browser. Other cookies are programmed to remain in the browser for years - unless they are deleted.
 
How to get rid of cookies?
All popular browsers offer the option to delete existing cookies. For example, deleting cookies via the latest version of Mozilla Firefox works via the "Settings" menu item and the "Privacy" tab. With the latest Internet Explorer, one selects the "Delete browsing history" section in the "Tools" menu. The user can also prevent cookies from being stored at all via the browser. However, this is not recommended.
 
Which handling of cookies is recommended?
It is not advisable to prevent the storage of all cookies from the outset. This is because important functionalities of websites depend on the fact that cookies can be set. This is because the browser is quite forgetful without cookies. For example, it cannot remember whether you are logged in - to the social network, the online store or the e-mail service.
 
Tip: Delete the cookies in the browser from time to time if you do not want your surfing behavior to be analyzed. If you basically do not want personal advertising, you can set the browser to block only the cookies of third-party providers - for example, advertising companies. Then you do not restrict the surfing comfort too much, but you can prevent companies from observing your surfing behavior across several websites. In the current Mozilla Firefox, click on "Settings" in the menu and then the "Privacy" tab. There, select the entry "Firefox will create a history according to user-defined settings". Remove the checkmark from third-party cookies. In the current Internet Explorer, you can find the option to block third-party cookies via "Tools", "Internet Options", "Privacy" and "Advanced". Click "Override automatic cookie handling" and block third-party cookies. 
 
Your consent refers to the domain: https://www.carbonfabrik.com
Source: www.test.de

What cookies are set

Name

Provider

Purpose

Procedure

Type

_ga

Google

Registers a unique ID that is used to generate statistical data about how the visitor uses the website.

2 years

http cookie

_gat

Google

Used by Google Analytics to limit the request rate.

1 day

http cookie

_gid

Google

Registers a unique ID that is used to generate statistical data about how the visitor uses the website.

1 day

http cookie

_gd....

Google

Unclassified Google Analytics cookie

1 day

http cookie

en_USEnglish