Cookie Policy
Last Updated: January 2025
This policy explains how Noxelin Orv uses tracking technologies on our website. We believe you should understand what data we collect and why we collect it. Our approach is straightforward—we only track what helps us provide better educational content about investment theory.
What Are Tracking Technologies?
When you visit noxelinorv.pro, small text files get stored on your device. These files help our website remember your preferences and understand how people interact with our educational content.
Think of them as digital bookmarks that make your browsing experience smoother. They remember things like whether you prefer reading articles in list view or card view, which courses you've looked at, and which resources you've downloaded.
But here's the thing—they can't identify you personally. They just see patterns. Someone visited the Dividend Theory page, spent four minutes reading, then moved to Portfolio Construction. That's the level of detail we get.
Types of Tracking We Use
Essential Tracking
These keep the website functioning properly. Without them, you couldn't navigate between pages, submit contact forms, or access member areas. We don't ask permission for these because the site literally won't work without them.
Functional Tracking
These remember your choices—like if you've dismissed a notification banner or selected a specific learning path. They make your experience more convenient by not asking you the same questions repeatedly.
Analytical Tracking
We use these to understand which educational content resonates with our audience. If everyone's reading about Modern Portfolio Theory but skipping articles on Factor Investing, that tells us something. We adjust our content priorities based on these insights.
Marketing Tracking
These help us show relevant information to people who've expressed interest in specific investment topics. If you've read three articles about Value Investing, we might highlight our upcoming seminar on that subject. We're not tracking your entire web history—just your interactions with our educational materials.
How Tracking Improves Your Experience
Let me give you concrete examples. Last autumn, our analytics showed people were bouncing off our Risk Management section quickly. We dug into the data and realized the content was too technical. We rewrote it with more practical examples, and now it's one of our most-read sections.
Or another instance—we noticed visitors from Dublin were particularly interested in ISA-related content, while those from Cork focused more on pension planning. That geographical insight helped us create region-specific resources.
Specific Ways We Use This Data
- Identifying which learning modules need better explanations based on completion rates
- Understanding the typical learning path people follow through our content
- Recognizing technical issues when users repeatedly reload pages
- Determining optimal times to publish new educational material
- Measuring whether our recent site redesign actually improved navigation
Data Retention Practices
How Long We Keep Data
Essential tracking data stays active during your browsing session and expires when you close your browser. Functional preferences might stick around for up to 12 months—long enough to be useful but not indefinitely.
Analytical data gets aggregated and anonymized after 26 months. After that point, we keep overall trends but not individual browsing patterns. Marketing tracking typically expires after 90 days unless you interact with our content again.
We review this data quarterly. If certain tracking isn't providing value, we stop collecting it. There's no point gathering information we're not actually using to improve our educational offerings.
Managing Your Tracking Preferences
Browser Controls
Every modern browser gives you control over tracking technologies. The process varies slightly, but here's where to look:
- Chrome: Settings → Privacy and security → Cookies and other site data
- Firefox: Settings → Privacy & Security → Cookies and Site Data
- Safari: Preferences → Privacy → Manage Website Data
- Edge: Settings → Cookies and site permissions → Manage and delete cookies
You can block all tracking, allow only specific sites, or delete existing data. Keep in mind that blocking essential tracking will prevent certain site features from working properly.
Third-Party Services
We use a few external services that have their own tracking policies. Our analytics platform helps us understand site usage. Our email service tracks whether learning resources we send actually get opened and read.
These services have their own privacy policies, which we've vetted to ensure they meet our standards. We don't share personal information with them—they only see anonymized behavioral data related to our website.
If you're curious about specific third-party policies, we're happy to provide those details. Just reach out to our team.
Changes to This Policy
We update this policy when our tracking practices change or when regulations evolve. The date at the top shows our most recent revision.
Significant changes get announced through our website banner and email updates. Minor clarifications or formatting improvements happen without notification—we trust you to check back occasionally if these details matter to you.
Questions About Our Tracking Practices?
If something in this policy seems unclear, or if you want details about specific tracking technologies we use, get in touch. We'd rather answer your questions directly than leave you wondering about how your data gets used.
Address: Johnstown Rd, Rathdowney, Co. Laois, R32 DC61, Ireland
Phone: +353 91 841 886
Email: [email protected]