Cookies and Tracking Technologies Policy
This policy pertains to the Payall Payment Systems, Inc., 1111 Lincoln Road, Suite 500, Miami Beach, Florida 33139, website https://payall.com and our other related services, tools and other applications (collectively, the “Site”). We, along with our vendors, use a variety of technologies to learn more about how people use the Site owned and controlled by Payall and provide you with a better, faster and safer user experience on the Site. This Cookies and Tracking Technologies Policy is designed to help you understand the type of cookies on our Site and to enable you to make an informed choice about which cookies you want on your devices. You can find out more about these technologies and how to control them in the information below. This policy forms part of the Payall Privacy Policy.
1. Cookies & Other Tracking Technologies & How We Use Them
As explained in our Privacy Policy, like many companies, we use cookies and other tracking technologies on our Site (referred to together from this point forward as “cookies,” unless otherwise stated). We might use different cookies on this Site, including HTTP cookies, HTML5 and Flash local storage, unique device Identifiers, probabilistic finger-printing, deterministic finger-printing, web beacons/GIFs, embedded scripts and e-tags/cache browsers as defined below. We may use cookies for a variety of purposes and to enhance your online experience: for example, viewing preferences from your previous use of our Site when you later return to the Site.
We use both session and persistent tracking technologies. Tracking technologies (e.g., cookies) can either be persistent (i.e., they remain on your computer until they expire or until you choose to delete them) or temporary (i.e., they last until you close your web browser).
We also use first- and third-party cookies. First-party cookies are used and controlled by us to provide services on the Site. Third-party cookies are controlled by third parties, mostly for the purpose of analytics.
In particular, our Site uses the following categories of cookies:
Strictly Necessary Cookies: These are cookies needed to provide services and features you have specifically requested. They help us make the Site available to you by providing basic functions, such as page navigation and access to secure areas of the Site. We use cookies and tracking technologies required to prevent fraudulent activity, improve security and/or for system administration. Without these cookies, our Site will not perform fully, and we may not be able to provide certain core functions and features of our Site. We are not required to obtain your consent to cookies that are strictly necessary.
Analytics- and Performance-Related Cookies: We may use cookies to assess the performance of our Site, including as part of our analytic practices to improve the services offered through the Site. These cookies may be used to prevent fraudulent activity and improve security.
Functionality-Related Cookies: We may use cookies to tell us, for example, whether you have visited the Site before or if you are a new visitor and to help us identify the features in which you may have the greatest interest.
Targeting-Related Cookies: We may use cookies to deliver content, including ads, relevant to your interests on our Site and third-party sites based on how you interact with our advertisements or content. We have set out further information about the use of cookies by our Ad Network partners in Section 3 below.
By using our Site and consenting on the pop-up box, you consent to the use of cookies and tracking technologies and the corresponding processing of information. You can withdraw your consent at any time by deleting placed cookies and disabling cookies in your browser without any adverse effect by opting-out of or blocking the application of such cookies. For further information about our use of cookies and tracking technologies and your opt-out choices, see “Your Cookie Choices & How to Opt-Out.” See Section 3 below for details of each type of cookie used on the Site,
Unless applicable law allows differently, analytic- and performance-related cookies, functionality-related cookies and targeting-related cookies are activated on the Site only after you consented to the application of such cookies using our pop-up window.
2. Your Cookie Choices & How to Opt-Out
You have the choice whether to accept the use of non-necessary cookies. We explain how you can exercise your rights below.
Most browsers are initially set up to accept HTTP cookies. The “help” feature of the menu bar on most browsers tells you how to stop accepting new cookies, how to receive notification of new cookies and how to disable existing cookies. For more information about HTTP cookies and how to disable them, click here. We are not responsible for the effectiveness of any such opt-out options.
We use the Google Analytics Website Analysis Service to capture and analyze the statistical data on the use of the Site. You can learn more about Google Analytics and the information these tools allow us to collect here. . You can use the Google Analytics opt-out browser add-
on if you want Google Analytics tools not to capture information about your web browsing here. California residents may be entitled to know the effects of opt-out options under the Consumer Privacy Act Section 1798.120. The effect of an opt-out, if successful, will be to
stop targeted advertising, but it will still allow the collection of usage data for certain purposes (e.g., research, analytics and internal Site operation purposes).
Controlling the HTML5 local storage on your browser depends on which browser you use. For more information regarding your specific browser, please consult the browser’s website (often in the Help section). Please refer below for further information on how to configure user’s cookie files for popular browsers such as:
Please note, however, that without HTTP cookies and HTML5 local storage, you may not be able to take full advantage of all our Site features and some parts of the Site may not function properly.
3. Information Collected & Cookies and Tracking Technologies Used on the Site
The following list sets out the information collected via the individual cookies and tracking technologies we use.
Cookies set directly by Payall.com
COOKIE NAME(S) | SOURCE | PURPOSE | STRICTLY NECESSARY |
---|---|---|---|
Payall_payment_systems_session | Payall | To identify the user's session instance in the Payall application | Yes |
XSRF-TOKEN | Payall | To protect your | Yes |
Cookies consent | Payall | To remember if the | Yes |
Cookies set directly by third-party services installed on this site
_ga | Google Analytics | These are performance cookies we use to collect information about how our visitors use the Site. We use this information to compile reports and to improve the Site experience. The cookies collect information such as: the number of Site visitors, where visitors come from and the pages they visit. | No |
4. Definitions
Cookies: A cookie (sometimes referred to as a local storage object or LSO) is a data file containing small amounts of information sent to your browser and placed on your device (e.g. your computer, tablet, mobile phone or other device) when you visit the Site. Cookies can be created through a variety of web-related protocols and technologies, such as HTTP (sometimes referred to as “browser cookies”), and HTML5. For more information on third-party cookies we use for analytics, please review the table in Section 3 of this “Cookies and Tracking Technologies Policy.”
Web Beacons: Small graphic images or other web programming code called web beacons (also known as “1×1 GIFs” or “clear GIFs”) may be included in our Site’s pages and messages. Web beacons may be invisible to you, but any electronic image or other web programming code inserted into a page or email can act as a web beacon. Clear GIFs are tiny graphics with a unique identifier, similar in function to cookies. In contrast to HTTP cookies, which are stored on a user's computer hard drive, clear GIFs are embedded invisibly on web pages and are about the size of the period at the end of this sentence.
Unique Device ID (UDID) Tokens: The unique series of numbers and letters assigned to your device.
Unique Device Tokens: For each user that accepts push notifications in mobile apps, the app developer is provided with a unique device token (think of it as an address) from the app platform (e.g., Apple and Google).
Deterministic Fingerprinting Technologies: If a user can be positively identified across multiple devices, for instance, because the user has logged into a platform such as Google, Facebook, Yahoo or Twitter, it can be “determined” who the user is for purposes of improving customer service.
Probabilistic Fingerprinting: Probabilistic tracking depends on collecting non-personal data regarding device attributes—such as operating system, device make and model, IP addresses, ad requests and location data— and making statistical inferences to link multiple devices to a single user. Note that this is accomplished through proprietary algorithms owned by the companies performing probabilistic fingerprinting. Note also that in the EU IP Addresses are personal information.
Device Graph: Device graphs can be created by combining non-personal data regarding use of smartphones and other devices with personal log-in information to track interactions with content across multiple devices.
Unique Identifier Header (UIDH): UIDH is the address information accompanying Internet (http) requests transmitted over an ISP’s wireless network. This includes items such as the device type and screen size, so the retailer site knows how to best display its site on the phone. The UIDH is included in this information and can be used as an anonymous way for advertisers to determine the user is part of a group that a third-party advertiser is attempting to reach. It is important to note that the UIDH is a temporary, anonymous identifier included with unencrypted web traffic. We change the UIDH regularly to protect the privacy of our customers. We do not use the UIDH to collect web browsing information and it does not broadcast individuals' web browsing activity out to advertisers or others.
Embedded Scripts: An embedded script is programming code that collects information about your interactions with the Site, such as the links you click on. The code is temporarily downloaded to your device from our web server or a third-party service provider. It is active only while you are connected to the Site and is deactivated or deleted thereafter.
ETag or Entity Tag: A feature of the cache in browsers, an ETag is an opaque identifier assigned by a web server to a specific version of a resource found at a URL. If the resource content at that URL ever changes, a new and different ETag is assigned. Used in this manner, ETags are a form of device identifier. ETag tracking may generate unique tracking values even when the user blocks HTTP, Flash and/or HTML5 cookies.
5. Contact Us
For any queries in relation to this “Cookies and Tracking Technologies Policy,” please contact us at privacy@payallps.com or Payall Payment Systems, Inc., Attn: Privacy Office, 1111 Lincoln Road, Suite 500, Miami Beach, Florida 33139.