






Privacy Policy
The following statement explains our policy regarding the personal
information we collect about you.
1. Statement of intent
2. Information on visitors
3.
What is a cookie?
4. Submitting personal information
5. Access to your personal information
6. Users 16 and under
7. How to find and control your cookies
8. How do you know
which sites use cookies ?
9. How to see your cookie code ?
1. Statement of intent
From
time to time, you may be asked to submit personal information about yourself (e.g.
name and email address etc) in order to receive or use services on our website. By
entering your details in the fields requested, you enable our company to provide
you with the services you select. Whenever you provide such personal information,
we will treat that information in accordance with this policy. Our services are designed
to give you the information that you want to receive. We will act in accordance with
current legislation and aim to meet current Internet best practice. [Top]
2. Information
on visitors
During the course of any visit to our site, the pages you see, along
with something called a cookie, may be downloaded to your computer (see point 3 for
more on this). Most, if not all, websites do this, because cookies allow the website
publisher to do useful things like find out whether the computer (and probably its
user) has visited the site before. This is done on a repeat visit by checking to
see, and finding, the cookie left there on the last visit. Any information that is
supplied by cookies can help us to provide you with a better service and assists
us to analyse the profile of our visitors. Both the cookies and the embedded code
provide non-personal statistical information about visits to pages on the site, the
duration of individual page view, paths taken by visitors through the site, data
on visitors' screen settings and other general information. We use this type of information,
as with that obtained from other cookies used on the site, to help it improve the
services to its users. If you wish to reject any cookie, you can use the process
set out below in point 7. [Top]
3. What is a cookie?
When you enter a site your computer
will automatically be issued with a cookie. Cookies are text files that identify
your computer to our server. Cookies in themselves do not identify the individual
user, just the computer used. Many sites do this whenever a user visits their site
in order to track traffic flows. Cookies themselves only record those areas of the
site that have been visited by the computer in question, and for how long. Users
have the opportunity to set their computers to accept all cookies, to notify them
when a cookie is issued, or not to receive cookies at any time. The last of these,
of course, means that certain personalised services cannot then be provided to that
user. NB: Even if you haven't set your computer to reject cookies you can still browse
our site anonymously. [Top]
4. Use and storage of your personal information
When you
supply any personal information to us we have legal obligations towards you in the
way we deal with that data. We must collect the information fairly, that is, we must
explain how we will use it and tell you if we want to pass the information on to
anyone else. In general, any information you provide to us will only be used by us.
It will never be supplied to anyone outside our company without first obtaining your
consent, unless we are obliged or permitted by law to disclose it. Also, if you post
or send offensive or inappropriate content anywhere on our site or otherwise engage
in any disruptive behaviour on our site, and we consider such behaviour to be serious
and/or repeated, we can use whatever information that is available to it about you
to stop such behaviour. This may include informing relevant third parties such as
your employer, school or e-mail provider about the content and your behaviour. We
will hold your personal information on our systems for as long as you use the service
you have requested, and remove it in the event that the purpose has been met or you
no longer wish to continue your registration with us. For safety reasons, however,
we may store messaging transcript data (including message content, member names,
times and dates) arising from the use of our site for a period of six months. Where
personal information is held for people who are not yet registered but who have taken
part in our services, that information will be held only as long as necessary to
ensure that the service is run smoothly. We will ensure that all personal information
supplied is held securely, in accordance with the Data Protection Act 1998. If you
are notified on our site that your information may be used to allow the us to contact
you for "service administration purposes", this means that we may contact you for
a number of purposes related to the service you have signed up for. For example,
we may wish to provide you with password reminders or notify you that the particular
service has been suspended for maintenance. We will not contact you for promotional
purposes, such as notifying you of improvements to the service or new services on
our site unless you specifically agree to be contacted for such purposes at the time
you submit your information on the site, or at a later time if you sign up specifically
to receive such promotional information. [Top]
5. Access to your personal information
You have the right to request a copy of the personal information we hold about you
and to have any inaccuracies corrected. (We, as most companies do, charge £10 for
information requests.) Please address requests to the Data Protection Officer, One
World Tours, 1 The Bungalow, Chilton Grove, Chilton, Sudbury, Suffolk, CO10 0PR.
[Top]
6. Users 16 and under
If you are aged 16 or under, please get your parent/guardian's
permission beforehand whenever you provide personal information to our website. Users
without this consent are not allowed to provide us with personal information. [Top]
7.
How to find and control your cookies
If you're using Netscape 6.0:
On your Task Bar,
click: 1. Edit, then 2. Preferences 3. Click on Advanced 4. Click on Cookies
If you're
using Internet Explorer 6.0: 1. Choose Tools, then 2. Internet Options 3. Click the
Privacy Tab 4. Click on Custom Level 5. Click on the 'Advanced' button 6. Check the
'override automatic cookie handing' box and select Accept, Block or Prompt for action
as appropriate.
If you're using Internet Explorer 5.0 or 5.5: 1. Choose Tools, then
2. Internet Options 3. Click the Security tab 4. Click on Custom Level 5. Scroll
down to the sixth option to see how cookies are handled by IE5 and change to Accept,
Disable, or Prompt for action as appropriate.
If you're using Internet Explorer 4.0:
1. Choose View, then 2. Internet Options 3. Click the Advanced tab 4. Scroll down
to the yellow exclamation icon under Security and choose one of the three options
to regulate your use of cookies.
In Internet Explorer 3.0: You can View, Options,
Advanced, then click on the button that says Warn before Accepting Cookies.
If you're
using Netscape Communicator 4.0: On your Task Bar, click: 1. Edit, then 2. Preferences
3. Click on Advanced 4. Set your options in the box that says Cookies. [Top]
8. How
do you know which of the sites you've visited use cookies?
If you're using Netscape
6.0: On your Task Bar, click: 1. Edit, then 2. Preferences 3. Click on Advanced 4.
Click on Cookies 5. Click the View Cookies button
If you're using Internet Explorer
5.0 or 6.0: 1. Choose Tools, then 2. Internet Options 3. Click the General tab 4.
Click Settings 5. View Files
If you're using Internet Explorer 4.0: On your Task
Bar, click: 1. View, then 2. Internet Options 3. Under the tab General (the default
tab) click 4. Settings 5. View Files.
Internet Explorer 3.0: On your Task Bar, click:
1. View 2. Options 3. Advanced 4. View Files.
Netscape Communicator 4.0: Netscape
bundles all cookies into one file on your hard drive. You'll need to find the file,
which it calls Cookie.txt on Windows machines. [Top]
9. How to see your cookie code
Just click on a cookie to open it. You'll see a short string of text and numbers.
The numbers are your identification card, which can only be seen by the server that
gave you the cookie. [Top]