PRIVACY POLICY

Table of Con­tents

Pri­va­cy Poli­cy

We have writ­ten this pri­va­cy poli­cy (ver­si­on 13.04.2021–111716586) to pro­vi­de you with infor­ma­ti­on in accordance with the requi­re­ments of the Gene­ral Data Pro­tec­tion Regu­la­ti­on (EU) 2016/679 as well as to explain what infor­ma­ti­on we coll­ect, how we use data and what choices you have as a visi­tor to this website.Privacy poli­ci­es usual­ly sound very tech­ni­cal. Howe­ver, this ver­si­on should descri­be the most important things as sim­ply and cle­ar­ly as pos­si­ble. Moreo­ver, tech­ni­cal terms are explai­ned in a rea­der-fri­end­ly man­ner when­ever pos­si­ble. We would also like to con­vey that we only coll­ect and use infor­ma­ti­on via this web­site if the­re is a cor­re­spon­ding legal basis for it. This is cer­tain­ly not pos­si­ble if you give very brief tech­ni­cal expl­ana­ti­ons, as are often stan­dard on the Inter­net when it comes to data pro­tec­tion. We hope you find the fol­lo­wing expl­ana­ti­ons inte­res­t­ing and infor­ma­ti­ve. May­be you will also find some infor­ma­ti­on that you did not know yet.
Should you still have ques­ti­ons, we kind­ly ask you to fol­low the exis­ting links to see fur­ther infor­ma­ti­on on third-par­ty web­sites, or to sim­ply wri­te us an email. You can find our cont­act infor­ma­ti­on in our website’s imprint.Automatic Data Reten­tion­Every time you visit a web­site nowa­days, cer­tain infor­ma­ti­on is auto­ma­ti­cal­ly crea­ted and stored, just as it hap­pens on this web­site. This data should be coll­ec­ted as spa­rin­gly as pos­si­ble, and only with good reason. By web­site, we mean the enti­re­ty of all web­sites on your domain, i.e. ever­y­thing from the home­page to the very last sub­page (like this one here). By domain we mean example.uk or examplepage.com.Even while you are curr­ent­ly visi­ting our web­site, our web ser­ver – this is the com­pu­ter this web­site is stored on, usual­ly auto­ma­ti­cal­ly reta­ins data such as the below – for reasons such as ope­ra­tio­nal secu­ri­ty or for crea­ting access sta­tis­tics etc.

  • the full address (URL) of the acces­sed web­site (e. g. https://www.examplepage.uk/examplesubpage.html/)
  • brow­ser and brow­ser ver­si­on (e.g. Chro­me 87)
  • the ope­ra­ting sys­tem used (e.g. Win­dows 10)
  • the address (URL) of the pre­vious­ly visi­ted site (refer­rer URL) (z. B. https://www.examplepage.uk/icamefromhere.html/)
  • the host name and the IP-address of the device the web­site is acces­sed from (e.g. COMPUTERNAME and 194.23.43.121)
  • date and time
  • in so-cal­led web ser­ver log files.

Gene­ral­ly, the­se files are stored for two weeks and are then auto­ma­ti­cal­ly dele­ted. We do not pass the­se data to others, but we can­not exclude the pos­si­bi­li­ty that this data may be loo­ked at by the aut­ho­ri­ties in case of ille­gal conduct.In short: your visit is log­ged by our pro­vi­der (com­pa­ny that runs our web­site on ser­vers), but we do not pass on your data!CookiesOur web­site uses HTTP-coo­kies to store user-spe­ci­fic data.
For your bet­ter under­stan­ding of the fol­lo­wing Pri­va­cy Poli­cy state­ment, we will explain to you below what coo­kies are and why they are in use.What exact­ly are cookies?Every time you surf the inter­net, you use a brow­ser. Com­mon brow­sers are for exam­p­le Chro­me, Safa­ri, Fire­fox, Inter­net Explo­rer and Micro­soft Edge. Most web­sites store small text-files in your brow­ser. The­se files are cal­led cookies.What should not be dis­missed, is that coo­kies are very useful litt­le hel­pers. Near­ly all web­sites use coo­kies. More accu­ra­te­ly spea­king the­se are HTTP-coo­kies, sin­ce the­re are also dif­fe­rent coo­kies for other uses. http-coo­kies are small files which our web­site stores on your com­pu­ter. The­se coo­kie files are auto­ma­ti­cal­ly put into the coo­kie-fol­der, which is like the “brain” of your brow­ser. A coo­kie con­sists of a name and a value. Moreo­ver, to defi­ne a coo­kie, one or mul­ti­ple attri­bu­tes must be specified.Cookies save cer­tain parts of your user data, such as e.g. lan­guage or per­so­nal page set­tings. When you re-open our web­site, your brow­ser sub­mits the­se “user spe­ci­fic” infor­ma­ti­on back to our site. Thanks to coo­kies, our web­site knows who you are and offers you the set­tings you are fami­li­ar to. In some brow­sers every coo­kie has its own file, in others such as Fire­fox, all coo­kies are stored in one sin­gle file.There are both first-par­ty coo­kies and third-par­ty coo­kies. First-par­ty coo­kies are crea­ted direct­ly by our site, while third-par­ty coo­kies are crea­ted by part­ner-web­sites (e.g. Goog­le Ana­ly­tics). Every coo­kie is indi­vi­du­al, sin­ce every coo­kie stores dif­fe­rent data. The expi­ra­ti­on time of a coo­kie also varies – it can be a few minu­tes, or up to a few years. Coo­kies are no soft­ware-pro­grams and con­tain no com­pu­ter viru­s­es, tro­jans or any other mal­wa­re. Coo­kies also can­not access your PC’s information.This is an exam­p­le of how coo­kie-files can look:name: _ga
value: GA1.2.1326744211.152111716586–9
pur­po­se: dif­fe­ren­tia­ti­on bet­ween web­site visi­tors
expi­ra­ti­on date: after 2 year­sA brow­ser should sup­port the­se mini­mum sizes:

  • at least 4096 bytes per coo­kie
  • at least 50 coo­kies per domain
  • at least 3000 coo­kies in total

Which types of coo­kies are the­re?

What exact coo­kies we use, depends on the used ser­vices. We will explain this in the fol­lo­wing sec­tions of the Pri­va­cy Poli­cy state­ment. First­ly, we will brief­ly focus on the dif­fe­rent types of HTTP-cookies.There are 4 dif­fe­rent types of coo­kies:Essen­ti­al Coo­kies
The­se coo­kies are neces­sa­ry to ensu­re the basic func­tion of a web­site. They are nee­ded when a user for exam­p­le puts a pro­duct into their shop­ping cart, then con­ti­nues sur­fing on dif­fe­rent web­sites and comes back later in order to pro­ceed to the check­out. Even when the user clo­sed their win­dow prio­r­ly, the­se coo­kies ensu­re that the shop­ping cart does not get dele­ted.Pur­po­si­ve Coo­kies
The­se coo­kies coll­ect info about the user beha­viour and record if the user poten­ti­al­ly recei­ves any error mes­sa­ges. Fur­ther­mo­re, the­se coo­kies record the website’s loa­ding time as well as its beha­viour within dif­fe­rent brow­sers.

Tar­get-ori­en­ta­ted Coo­kies
The­se coo­kies care for an impro­ved user-fri­end­li­ne­ss. Thus, infor­ma­ti­on such as pre­vious­ly ente­red loca­ti­ons, fonts or data in forms stay saved.

Adver­ti­sing Coo­kies
The­se coo­kies are also known as tar­ge­ting-Coo­kies. They ser­ve the pur­po­se of deli­ve­ring indi­vi­du­al­ly adapt­ed adver­ti­se­ments to the user. This can be very prac­ti­cal, but also rather annoying.Upon your first visit to a web­site you are usual­ly asked which of the­se coo­kie-types you want to accept. Fur­ther­mo­re, this decis­i­on will of cour­se also be saved in a cookie.How can I dele­te cookies?You yours­elf take the decis­i­on if and how you want to use coo­kies. Thus, no mat­ter what ser­vice or web­site coo­kies are from, you always have the opti­on to dele­te, deac­ti­va­te or only par­ti­al­ly allow them. The­r­e­fo­re, you can for exam­p­le block coo­kies of third par­ties but allow any other cookies.If you want chan­ge or dele­te coo­kie-set­tings and would like to deter­mi­ne which coo­kies have been saved to your brow­ser, you can find this info in your brow­ser-set­tings: Chro­me: Clear, enable and mana­ge coo­kies in Chro­me Safa­ri: Mana­ge coo­kies and web­site data in Safa­ri Fire­fox: Clear coo­kies and site data in Fire­fox Inter­net Explo­rer: Dele­te and mana­ge coo­kies Micro­soft Edge: Dele­te coo­kies in Micro­soft Edge If you gene­ral­ly do not want to allow any coo­kies at all, you can set up your brow­ser in a way, to noti­fy you when­ever a poten­ti­al coo­kie is about to be set. This gives you the oppor­tu­ni­ty to manu­al­ly deci­de to eit­her per­mit or deny the pla­ce­ment of every sin­gle coo­kie. The set­tings for this dif­fer from brow­ser to brow­ser. The­r­e­fo­re, it might be best for you to search for the ins­truc­tions in Goog­le. If you are using Chro­me, you could for exam­p­le put the search phra­se “dele­te coo­kies Chro­me” or “deac­ti­va­te coo­kies Chro­me” into Google.How is my data protected?There is a “coo­kie poli­cy” that has been in place sin­ce 2009. It sta­tes that the sto­rage of coo­kies requi­res the user’s con­sent. Howe­ver, among the count­ries of the EU, the­se gui­de­lines are often met with mixed reac­tions. In Aus­tria the gui­de­lines have been imple­men­ted in § 96 sec­tion 3 of the Tele­com­mu­ni­ca­ti­ons Act (TKG).If you want to learn more about coo­kies and do not mind 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”.Storage of Per­so­nal Dat­a­A­ny per­so­nal data you elec­tro­ni­cal­ly sub­mit to us on this web­site, such as your name, email address, home address or other per­so­nal infor­ma­ti­on you pro­vi­de via the trans­mis­si­on of a form or via any comm­ents to the blog, are sole­ly used for the spe­ci­fied pur­po­se and get stored secu­re­ly along with the respec­ti­ve sub­mis­si­on times and IP-address. The­se data do not get pas­sed on to third parties.Therefore, we use per­so­nal data for the com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on with only tho­se users, who have expli­cit­ly reques­ted being cont­ac­ted, as well as for the exe­cu­ti­on of the ser­vices and pro­ducts offe­red on this web­site. We do not pass your per­so­nal data to others wit­hout your appr­oval, but we can­not exclude the pos­si­bi­li­ty this data will be loo­ked at in case of ille­gal conduct.If you send us per­so­nal data via email – and thus not via this web­site – we can­not gua­ran­tee any safe trans­mis­si­on or pro­tec­tion of your data. We recom­mend you, to never send con­fi­den­ti­al data via email.Rights in accordance with the Gene­ral Data Pro­tec­tion Regu­la­tionY­ou are gran­ted the fol­lo­wing rights in accordance with the pro­vi­si­ons of the GDPR (Gene­ral Data Pro­tec­tion Regu­la­ti­on) and the Aus­tri­an Data Pro­tec­tion Act (DSG):

  • right to rec­ti­fi­ca­ti­on (artic­le 16 GDPR)
  • right to era­su­re (“right to be for­got­ten“) (artic­le 17 GDPR)
  • right to rest­rict pro­ces­sing (artic­le 18 GDPR)
  • righ to noti­fi­ca­ti­on – noti­fi­ca­ti­on obli­ga­ti­on regar­ding rec­ti­fi­ca­ti­on or era­su­re of per­so­nal data or rest­ric­tion of pro­ces­sing (artic­le 19 GDPR)
  • right to data por­ta­bi­li­ty (artic­le 20 GDPR)
  • Right to object (artic­le 21 GDPR)
  • right not to be sub­ject to a decis­i­on based sole­ly on auto­ma­ted pro­ces­sing – inclu­ding pro­fil­ing – (artic­le 22 GDPR)

If you think that the pro­ces­sing of your data vio­la­tes the data pro­tec­tion law, or that your data pro­tec­tion rights have been inf­rin­ged in any other way, you can lodge a com­plaint with your respec­ti­ve regu­la­to­ry aut­ho­ri­ty. For Aus­tria this is the data pro­tec­tion aut­ho­ri­ty, who­se web­site you can access at https://www.data-protection-authority.gv.at/.Eva­lua­ti­on of Visi­tor Beha­viou­rIn the fol­lo­wing Pri­va­cy Poli­cy, we will inform you on if and how we eva­lua­te the data of your visit to this web­site. The eva­lua­ti­on is gene­ral­ly made anony­mously, and we can­not link to you per­so­nal­ly based on your beha­viour on this website.You can find out more about how to dis­agree with the eva­lua­ti­on of visi­tor data, in the Pri­va­cy Poli­cy below.TLS encryp­ti­on with https­The terms TLS, encryp­ti­on and https sound very tech­ni­cal, which they are inde­ed. We use HTTPS (Hyper­text Trans­fer Pro­to­col Secu­re) to secu­re­ly trans­fer data on the Inter­net.
This means that the enti­re trans­mis­si­on of all data from your brow­ser to our web ser­ver is secu­red – nobo­dy can “lis­ten in”.We have thus intro­du­ced an addi­tio­nal lay­er of secu­ri­ty and meet pri­va­cy requi­re­ments through tech­no­lo­gy design Artic­le 25 Sec­tion 1 GDPR). With the use of TLS (Trans­port Lay­er Secu­ri­ty), which is an encryp­ti­on pro­to­col for safe data trans­fer on the inter­net, we can ensu­re the pro­tec­tion of con­fi­den­ti­al infor­ma­ti­on.
You can reco­g­ni­se the use of this safe­guar­ding tool by the litt­le lock-sym­bol , which is situa­ted in your browser’s top left cor­ner in the left of the inter­net address (e.g. examplepage.uk), as well as by the dis­play of the let­ters https (ins­tead of http) as a part of our web address.
If you want to know more about encryp­ti­on, we recom­mend you to do a Goog­le search for “Hyper­text Trans­fer Pro­to­col Secu­re wiki” to find good links to fur­ther information.Google Fonts Pri­va­cy Poli­cyOn our web­site we use Goog­le Fonts, from the com­pa­ny Goog­le Inc. (1600 Amphi­theat­re Park­way Moun­tain View, CA 94043, USA).To use Goog­le Fonts, you must log in and set up a pass­word. Fur­ther­mo­re, no coo­kies will be saved in your brow­ser. The data (CSS, Fonts) will be reques­ted via the Goog­le domains fonts.googleapis.com and fonts.gstatic.com. Accor­ding to Goog­le, all requests for CSS and fonts are ful­ly sepa­ra­ted from any other Goog­le ser­vices. If you have a Goog­le account, you do not need to worry that your Goog­le account details are trans­mit­ted to Goog­le while you use Goog­le Fonts. Goog­le records the use of CSS (Cas­ca­ding Style Sheets) as well as the uti­li­sed fonts and stores the­se data secu­re­ly. We will have a detail­ed look at how exact­ly the data sto­rage works.What are Goog­le Fonts?Google Fonts (pre­vious­ly Goog­le Web Fonts) is a list of over 800 fonts which href=”https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google?tid=111716586”>Google LLC pro­vi­des its users for free.Many of the­se fonts have been published under the SIL Open Font Licen­se licen­se, while others have been published under the Apa­che licen­se. Both are free soft­ware licenses.Why do we use Goog­le Fonts on our website?With Goog­le Fonts we can use dif­fe­rent fonts on our web­site and do not have to upload them to our own ser­ver. Goog­le Fonts is an important ele­ment which helps to keep the qua­li­ty of our web­site high. All Goog­le fonts are auto­ma­ti­cal­ly opti­mi­sed for the web, which saves data volu­me and is an advan­ta­ge espe­ci­al­ly for the use of mobi­le ter­mi­nal devices. When you use our web­site, the low data size pro­vi­des fast loa­ding times. Moreo­ver, Goog­le Fonts are secu­re Web Fonts. Various image syn­the­sis sys­tems (ren­de­ring) can lead to errors in dif­fe­rent brow­sers, ope­ra­ting sys­tems and mobi­le ter­mi­nal devices. The­se errors could opti­cal­ly distort parts of texts or enti­re web­sites. Due to the fast Con­tent Deli­very Net­work (CDN) the­re are no cross-plat­form issues with Goog­le Fonts. All com­mon brow­sers (Goog­le Chro­me, Mozil­la Fire­fox, Apple Safa­ri, Ope­ra) are sup­port­ed by Goog­le Fonts, and it relia­bly ope­ra­tes on most modern mobi­le ope­ra­ting sys­tems, inclu­ding Android 2.2+ and iOS 4.2+ (iPho­ne, iPad, iPod). We also use Goog­le Fonts for pre­sen­ting our enti­re online ser­vice as plea­sant­ly and as uni­form­ly as possible.Which data is saved by Google?Whenever you visit our web­site, the fonts are rel­oa­ded by a Goog­le ser­ver. Through this exter­nal cue, data gets trans­fer­red to Google’s ser­vers. The­r­e­fo­re, this makes Goog­le reco­g­ni­se that you (or your IP-address) is visi­ting our web­site. The Goog­le Fonts API was deve­lo­ped to redu­ce the usa­ge, sto­rage and gathe­ring of end user data to the mini­mum nee­ded for the pro­per depic­tion of fonts. What is more, API stands for „Appli­ca­ti­on Pro­gramming Inter­face“ and works as a soft­ware data intermediary.Google Fonts stores CSS and font requests safe­ly with Goog­le, and the­r­e­fo­re it is pro­tec­ted. Using its coll­ec­ted usa­ge figu­res, Goog­le can deter­mi­ne how popu­lar the indi­vi­du­al fonts are. Goog­le publishes the results on inter­nal ana­ly­sis pages, such as Goog­le Ana­ly­tics. Moreo­ver, Goog­le also uti­li­ses data of ist own web craw­ler, in order to deter­mi­ne which web­sites are using Goog­le fonts. This data is published in Goog­le Fonts’ Big­Query data­ba­se. Enter­pre­neurs and deve­lo­pers use Google’s web­ser­vice Big­Query to be able to inspect and move big volu­mes of data.One more thing that should be con­side­red, is that every request for Goog­le Fonts auto­ma­ti­cal­ly trans­mits infor­ma­ti­on such as lan­guage pre­fe­ren­ces, IP address, brow­ser ver­si­on, as well as the browser’s screen reso­lu­ti­on and name to Google’s ser­vers. It can­not be cle­ar­ly iden­ti­fied if this data is saved, as Goog­le has not direct­ly declared it.How long and whe­re is the data stored?Google saves requests for CSS assets for one day in a tag on their ser­vers, which are pri­ma­ri­ly loca­ted out­side of the EU. This makes it pos­si­ble for us to use the fonts by means of a Goog­le style­sheet. With the help of a style­sheet, e.g. designs or fonts of a web­site can get chan­ged swift­ly and easily.Any font rela­ted data is stored with Goog­le for one year. This is becau­se Google’s aim is to fun­da­men­tal­ly boost web­sites’ loa­ding times. With mil­li­ons of web­sites refer­ring to the same fonts, they are buf­fe­r­ed after the first visit and instant­ly reap­pear on any other web­sites that are visi­ted the­re­af­ter. Some­ti­mes Goog­le updates font files to eit­her redu­ce the data sizes, increase the lan­guage covera­ge or to impro­ve the design.How can I dele­te my data or pre­vent it being stored?The data Goog­le stores for eit­her a day or a year can­not be dele­ted easi­ly. Upon ope­ning the page this data is auto­ma­ti­cal­ly trans­mit­ted to Goog­le. In order to clear the data ahead of time, you have to cont­act Google’s sup­port at https://support.google.com/?hl=en-GB&tid=111716586. The only way for you to pre­vent the reten­ti­on of your data is by not visi­ting our website.Unlike other web fonts, Goog­le offers us unrest­ric­ted access to all its fonts. Thus, we have a vast sea of font types at our dis­po­sal, which helps us to get the most out of our web­site. You can find out more ans­wers and infor­ma­ti­on on Goog­le Fonts at https://developers.google.com/fonts/faq?tid=111716586. While Goog­le does address rele­vant ele­ments on data pro­tec­tion at this link, it does not con­tain any detail­ed infor­ma­ti­on on data reten­ti­on.
It pro­ofs rather dif­fi­cult to recei­ve any pre­cise infor­ma­ti­on on stored data by Google.On https://policies.google.com/privacy?hl=en-GB you can read more about what data is gene­ral­ly coll­ec­ted by Goog­le and what this data is used for.Font Awe­so­me Pri­va­cy Poli­cyOn our web­site we use Font Awe­so­me by the Ame­ri­can com­pa­ny Fon­ti­cons (307 S. Main St., Suite 202, Ben­ton­ville, AR 72712, USA). Upon your visit to one of our web­sites, the Font Awe­so­me web font, i.e. the icons, are loa­ded via the Font Awe­so­me Con­tent Deli­very Net­work (CDN). This way texts, fonts and icons are dis­play­ed appro­pria­te­ly on every device. In this pri­va­cy poli­cy we will go into more detail on data sto­rage and data pro­ces­sing by this service.What is Font Awesome?Icons play an incre­asing­ly important role on web­sites. Font Awe­so­me is a web font spe­ci­fi­cal­ly desi­gned for web desi­gners and web deve­lo­pers. With Font Awe­so­me icons can for exam­p­le be sca­led and colou­red as desi­red using the CSS style­sheet lan­guage. Thus, they now replace old pic­tu­re icons. Font Awe­so­me CDN is the easie­st way to load icons or fonts onto your web­site. To do this, we only had to embed a short line of code into our website.Why do we use Font Awe­so­me on our website?Font Awe­so­me enables our web­sites’ con­tent to be depic­ted bet­ter. This eases your navi­ga­ti­on on our web­site, and helps you grasp its con­tent bet­ter. The icons can some­ti­mes even be used to replace who­le words and save space. This is par­ti­cu­lar­ly useful when opti­mi­sing con­tent spe­ci­fi­cal­ly for smart­phones. The icons are inser­ted as HMTL code ins­tead of as an image, which allows us to edit the icons with CSS exact­ly as we want. Simul­ta­neous­ly, Font Awe­so­me also lets us impro­ve our loa­ding speed, as it only con­ta­ins HTML ele­ments and no icon images. All the­se advan­ta­ges help us to make our web­site even clea­rer, fas­ter and more refi­ned for you.Which data are stored by Font Awesome?The Font Awe­so­me Con­tent Deli­very Net­work (CDN) is used to load icons and sym­bols. CDNs are net­works of ser­vers that are dis­tri­bu­ted around the world. They make it pos­si­ble to quick­ly load files from loca­ti­ons in clo­se pro­xi­mi­ty. When you open one of our pages, the respec­ti­ve icons will be pro­vi­ded by Font Awesome.For the web fonts to be loa­ded, your brow­ser has to con­nect to the ser­vers of Fon­ti­cons, Inc. For this, your IP address will be iden­ti­fied. Font Awe­so­me also coll­ects data on which icon files are down­loa­ded, as well as when they are down­loa­ded. Fur­ther­mo­re, tech­ni­cal data such as your brow­ser ver­si­on, screen reso­lu­ti­on or the time when you acces­sed the page are also transmitted.These data are coll­ec­ted and stored for the fol­lo­wing reasons:

  • to opti­mi­se Con­tent Deli­very Net­works
  • to iden­ti­fy and fix tech­ni­cal errors
  • to pro­tect CDNs from misu­se and attacks
  • to cal­cu­la­te fees from Font Awe­so­me Pro cus­to­mers
  • to iden­ti­fy the popu­la­ri­ty of icons
  • to estab­lish which com­pu­ter and soft­ware you are using

If your brow­ser does not allow web fonts, one of your PC’s stan­dard fonts will be used auto­ma­ti­cal­ly. Moreo­ver, as far as we are curr­ent­ly awa­re, no coo­kies will be set. We are kee­ping in cont­act with Font Awesome’s pri­va­cy depart­ment and will let you know as soon as we find out more.How long and whe­re are the data stored?Font Awe­so­me stores data about the use of the Con­tent Deli­very Net­work also on ser­vers in the United Sta­tes of Ame­ri­ca. Howe­ver, the CDN ser­vers are loca­ted all across the world and store user data in your pro­xi­mi­ty. The data is usual­ly only stored for a few weeks in an iden­ti­fia­ble form. Aggre­ga­ted sta­tis­tics on the use of the CDNs may also be stored for lon­ger. Howe­ver, the­se do not include any per­so­nal data.How can I dele­te my data or pre­vent data retention?As far as we are awa­re, Font Awe­so­me does not store any per­so­nal data via Con­tent Deli­very Net­works. If you do not want data about the used icons to be stored, you will unfort­u­na­te­ly not be able to visit our web­site. If your brow­ser does not allow web fonts, no data will be trans­mit­ted or saved. In this case your computer’s default font will be used.If you want to find out more about Font Awe­so­me and their data hand­ling, we recom­mend you to read their pri­va­cy poli­cy at https://fontawesome.com/privacy along with the help page at https://fontawesome.com/help.All texts are copyrighted.Source: Crea­ted with the Daten­schutz Gene­ra­tor by AdSimp­le