Cookie Policy

This Cookie Policy explains what cookies are, how we and third parties use them on the BrandLock website, and how you can manage your preferences.

Last Modified: March 04, 2026Part of our Privacy Policy

About This Cookie Policy

This Cookie Policy is an integral part of our Privacy Policy. Any terms used herein and not defined shall have the meaning ascribed to them in the Privacy Policy. This policy describes cookies used on the BrandLock website (brandlock.io).

BrandLock Website

Cookies on brandlock.io

This policy describes all first-party and third-party cookies used on our corporate website, including analytics, advertising, and functional cookies.

  • First-party cookies for site functionality
  • Third-party analytics (Google, HubSpot, LeadFeeder)
  • Advertising cookies (Facebook, LinkedIn, YouTube)
  • Information collected: device info, pages visited, ad IDs
BrandLock Services

JavaScript Tag on Customer Sites

Our BrandLock JavaScript services — when deployed on customer websites — do not use cookies to collect personal identifiers or PII.

  • Operates using hashed & anonymous telemetry only
  • No PII cookies are set on customer sites
  • Used exclusively for service delivery
  • None of the cookies listed below apply to BrandLock Services

1. Cookies and Similar Technologies

A cookie is a small text file placed on your browser by websites you visit. Pixel tags (web beacons or clear GIFs) are transparent graphic images used in combination with cookies to measure visitor actions. Cookies are commonly used to make websites function efficiently, remember your preferences, and enable analytics and advertising.

Cookies fall into two main origin categories: First-Party Cookies come directly from the website you visit, and Third-Party Cookies come from external services. By duration, Session Cookies expire when you close your browser, while Persistent Cookies remain until deleted or expired.

2. Categories of Cookies

Strictly Necessary

Essential Cookies

Enable communication between your device and the website. Required for basic site functionality and service delivery as explicitly requested by you.

Functionality

Preference Cookies

Remember your choices (username, language, region) and provide enhanced, personalized features to improve your experience.

Performance / Analytics

Analytics Cookies

Collect aggregate information about how visitors use the site — which pages are visited most, error messages, etc. These do not personally identify you.

Advertising / Targeting

Ad Cookies

Deliver personalized advertisements based on your browsing activity, measure campaign effectiveness, and connect with advertising networks.

3. What Information Is Collected via Cookies

Information collected on our website through cookies includes:

  • Information about your operating system and device
  • Webpages accessed within our site, the link that led you to our site, dates and times of access, and general location information (city or region)
  • Event information such as system crashes
  • Information provided by users to streamline experience (e.g., preventing re-entry of details)
  • Number of visitors and which webpages have been viewed
  • Advertising user ID and information associated with targeted advertising

4. How to Manage Cookies

You can adjust your browser settings to manage, reject, or be notified about cookies. These settings are usually found in the “Options” or “Preferences” menu of your browser. Most browsers also let you view and selectively delete stored cookies.

Note: Disabling certain cookies may limit some features of our site. You may also opt out via the NAI opt-out page or the DAA opt-out page.

5. First-Party Cookies on Our Site

6. Third-Party Cookies on Our Site

7. Changes and Updates

We may update this Cookie Policy from time to time. We encourage you to periodically review this policy to stay informed about our use of cookies and any updates. Changes will be posted on our site.

Global Privacy Control & Opt-Out Signals

We honor Global Privacy Control (GPC) signals and other legally-recognized opt-out preference signals as required by the CCPA/CPRA (effective January 1, 2026) and applicable state laws in Delaware, Indiana, Kentucky, Rhode Island, and other jurisdictions. When we detect a valid GPC signal from your browser, we treat it as a request to opt out of the sale or sharing of personal information associated with that browser.

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