WebWoman's Books

Privacy and Security Policies

Privacy Policy

We collect no personal information about you when you visit this WebWoman Web site, unless you choose to provide this information to us. However, we do collect and store certain information automatically. What we collect and store automatically is: the Internet Protocol (IP) address of the domain from which you access the Internet (i.e. 123.456.789.012) whether yours individually or provided as a proxy by your Internet Service Provider (ISP); the date and time you access our site; and the pages you peruse (recorded by the text and graphics files that compose that page). We use the summary statistics to help us make our site more useful to visitors, such as assessing what information is of most and least interest to visitors, and for other purposes such as determining the site's technical design specifications and identifying system performance or problem areas. This information is NOT shared with anyone outside the WebWoman Staff, except when required by Law Enforcement investigation, and is used only as a source of anonymous statistical information.

Comments Sent By Email

You may choose to provide us with personal information via an email message containing your comments and/or questions. We use this information to respond to your requests or comments only. Except for authorized law enforcement investigations, we do not share our email or email addresses with any other outside organizations.

Security Policy

We do not collect or store any credit card information on our Web site. Because all payment transactions are conducted through PayPal or one of our affiliates, we never see your credit card data. The only personal information we collect is that provided by you on forms, which mostly involves your name, comments, and your email address. See above privacy policy for details.

Unauthorized attempts to defeat or circumvent security features, to use the system for other than intended purposes, to deny service to authorized users, to access, obtain, alter, damage, or destroy information, or otherwise to interfere with the system or its operation is prohibited. Evidence of such acts may be disclosed to law enforcement authorities and result in criminal prosecution under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act of 1986 and the National Information Infrastructure Protection Act of 1996, codified at section 1030 of Title 18 of the United States Code, or other applicable criminal laws.

 


JavaScript Concepts: About the Book | Errata/Corrections | FAQ | Glossary | Index | Instructor Resources | Reviews | Sample Chapter | Table of Contents
JavaScript Object Reference: About the Book | Reviews | Table of Contents
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