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This is how we handle
information from your visit to our website.
We do not collect or store
the name of the domain and host from which you access the Internet
(for example, aol.com or princeton.edu); the Internet protocol (IP)
address of the computer you are using; the browser software you use or
your operating system; the date and time you access our site; or the
Internet address of the website from which you linked directly to our
site.
However, For site security
purposes and to ensure that this service remains available to all
authorized users, our Internet Service Provided (ISP) employs software
programs to monitor network traffic to identify unauthorized attempts
to up load or change information, or otherwise cause damage, or perpetrate
Denial Of Service Attacks in violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse
Act of 1986 and the National Information Infrastructure Protection
Act.
We do not use
"cookies" on this site.
If you choose to identify
yourself by sending us an email or when using our password protected
areas, that information is not stored on this website or on
any publicly accessible retrieval system.
If you contact us, we will
use your information only to fulfill your request or to contact you
about your request.
Here's what you should know
about the information you provide to us:
- If you send us an email, you
should know that email is not necessarily secure against
interception.
Here's how to contact us:
- You may contact us by
email.
If you do so, we may use the information you provide in the ways we
have described in this privacy policy.
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- If you experience technical
problems with the operation of this website, contact our
Webmaster.
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- This website links to
documents located on websites maintained by various other
organizations. Once you access an individual document that links you
to another website, you are subject to the privacy policy of the
website containing that document
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- Cookie
- A "cookie"is a
small text file that a website can place on your computer's hard
drive in order, for example, to collect information about your
activities on the site or to make it possible for you to use an
online "shopping cart" to keep track of items you wish to
purchase. The cookie transmits this information back to the Web
site's computer which, generally speaking, is the only computer that
can read it. Most consumers do not know that "cookies" are
being placed on their computers when they visit websites. If you
want to know when this happens, or to prevent it from happening, you
can set your browser to warn you when a website attempts to place a
"cookie" on your computer.
Last
Updated: Sunday, February 27, 2005
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