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Privacy Policy

The protection of your personal data is of particular concern to me. I therefore use your data exclusively on the basis of the statutory provisions (GDPR, TKG 2003). This privacy policy serves to inform you about the type, scope and purpose of the collection and processing of your data.

We are the data controller within the meaning of data protection law. If you have any questions about the collection, processing or use of your personal data, please contact us in writing at

Alexandra Schick,
Porzellangasse 11
1090 Vienna
 

Salzburg office
Contact person: 
Michaela Perner
Innsbrucker Bundesstraße 35
5020 Salzburg
Tel: +43/660/429 4829
Mail: mund.interdisziplinaer@gmail.com

Data security

Your contact details are encrypted and transmitted via the Internet using SSL technology. I secure my website and other systems through technical and organisational measures against loss, destruction, access, modification or distribution of your data by unauthorised persons.

Automatic data storage

The web servers (provider World4you.at) generate log files containing the following information:

Web server log files are created for reasons of operational security, to create access statistics, etc. These log files are stored for a fortnight in accordance with the GDPR. World4you customers also have access to error log files, which are helpful in finding errors. These are also automatically deleted after two weeks. The web servers are located in Vienna and Linz.


Use of script libraries (Google Web Fonts)

In order to display the content correctly and graphically appealing across browsers, we use "Google Web Fonts" from Google LLC (1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, USA; hereinafter "Google") to display fonts on this website.

The privacy policy of the library operator Google can be found here: https://www.google.com/policies/privacy/
Personal data

Data that you provide to me via this website (contact form) will be treated responsibly and used only in the sense and for the purpose of the application. You are free to decide whether you wish to disclose this data.
Rights as a data subject

You have the right to information about your personal data, as well as the right to rectification or erasure or restriction of processing. 

You can also object to the processing and have the right to transfer your personal data in a structured, machine-readable form. For all these rights, please use the contact details of the controller.
Right to lodge a complaint

You also have the right to lodge a complaint with a supervisory authority. For Austria, this is the Austrian Data Protection Authority, Wickenburggasse 8, 1080 Vienna, telephone: +43 1 52 152-0, e-mail: dsb@dsb.gv.at, web: https://www.dsb.gv.at/.

We have prepared this privacy policy (version 26 January 2021-211140426) to explain to you, in accordance with the requirements of the General Data Protection Regulation (EU) 2016/679, what information we collect, how we use data and what choices you have as a visitor to this website.

Unfortunately, it is in the nature of things that these explanations sound very technical, but we have endeavoured to describe the most important things as simply and clearly as possible.

Cookies

Our website uses HTTP cookies to store user-specific data.
Below we explain what cookies are and why they are used so that you can better understand the following privacy policy.
What exactly are cookies?
 

Whenever you surf the internet, you use a browser. Well-known browsers include Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Internet Explorer and Microsoft Edge. Most websites save small text files in your browser. These files are called cookies.

One thing cannot be denied: Cookies are really useful little helpers. Almost all websites use cookies. More precisely, they are HTTP cookies, as there are also other cookies for other areas of application. HTTP cookies are small files that are stored on your computer by our website. These cookie files are automatically stored in the cookie folder, the "brain" of your browser, so to speak. A cookie consists of a name and a value. When defining a cookie, one or more attributes must also be specified.

Cookies store certain user data about you, such as language or personal page settings. When you visit our site again, your browser transmits the "user-related" information back to our site. Thanks to cookies, our website knows who you are and offers you the settings you are used to. In some browsers, each cookie has its own file; in others, such as Firefox, all cookies are stored in a single file.

There are both first-party cookies and third-party cookies. First-party cookies are created directly by our website, third-party cookies are created by partner websites (e.g. Google Analytics). Each cookie must be evaluated individually, as each cookie stores different data. The expiry time of a cookie also varies from a few minutes to a few years. Cookies are not software programmes and do not contain viruses, Trojans or other "malware". Cookies also cannot access information on your PC.

Cookie data can look like this, for example:

Name: _ga
Wert: GA1.2.1326744211.152211140426-6
Purpose: To differentiate between website visitors
Expiry date: after 2 years

A browser should be able to support these minimum sizes:

   At least 4096 bytes per cookie
   At least 50 cookies per domain
   At least 3000 cookies in total

What types of cookies are there?

The question of which cookies we use in particular depends on the services used and is clarified in the following sections of the privacy policy. At this point, we would like to briefly explain the different types of HTTP cookies.

There are 4 types of cookies:

Essential cookies

These cookies are necessary to ensure basic website functions. For example, these cookies are needed when a user places a product in the shopping basket, then continues surfing on other pages and only goes to the checkout later. These cookies ensure that the shopping basket is not deleted even if the user closes their browser window.

Purposeful cookies
These cookies collect information about user behaviour and whether the user receives any error messages. These cookies are also used to measure the loading time and the behaviour of the website with different browsers.

Targeted cookies
These cookies ensure better user-friendliness. For example, entered locations, font sizes or form data are saved.

Advertising cookies
These cookies are also known as targeting cookies. They are used to deliver customised advertising to the user. This can be very practical, but also very annoying.

When you visit a website for the first time, you are usually asked which of these types of cookie you would like to allow. And of course this decision is also saved in a cookie.
 

How can I delete cookies?

You decide how and whether you want to use cookies.


Regardless of which service or website the cookies originate from, you always have the option of deleting, deactivating or only partially allowing cookies.For example, you can block third-party cookies but allow all other cookies.If you want to find out which cookies have been stored in your browser, if you want to change or delete cookie settings, you can find this in your browser settings:

Chrome: Delete, enable and manage cookies in Chrome

Safari: Manage cookies and website data with SafariFirefox: Delete cookies to remove data that websites have stored on your computer

Internet Explorer: Delete and manage cookies

Microsoft Edge: Delete and manage cookiesIf you do not want any cookies, you can set up your browser so that it always informs you when a cookie is to be set. You can then decide for each individual cookie whether or not to allow it.The procedure differs depending on the browser.It is best to search for the instructions in Google using the search term "delete cookies Chrome" or "deactivate cookies Chrome" in the case of a Chrome browser.
 

What about my data protection?

The so-called "cookie guidelines" have been in place since 2009.


These state that you must give your consent for cookies to be saved.
However, there are still very different reactions to these directives within the EU countries. In Austria, however, this directive has been implemented in Section 96 (3) of the Telecommunications Act (TKG).If you would like to know more about cookies and are not afraid of technical documentation, we recommend https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6265, the Request for Comments of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) called "HTTP State Management Mechanism".Source: Created with the data protection generator from firmenwebseiten.at