Evans Law PLLC Web Site Privacy Policy
January 25, 2006
Purpose
Evans Law PLLC is committed to ensuring our website visitors’ personal privacy. This statement summarizes our current practices on gathering and handling data about website visitors. Although our website contains links to other sites, we are not responsible for the privacy practices they employ or for their site content.
Summary of Policy
Through the website, we collect information about visitors who knowingly and voluntarily provide information to us. Otherwise, no information revealing your identity is collected. This means that you may visit our website without telling us who you are or revealing any information about yourself. If you choose to provide personal information to us, then we will not disclose it to anyone outside Evans Law PLLC unless you specifically authorize it or disclosure is required by law or disclosure is determined necessary to protect the safety or security of our clients, employees, and/or property.
Information We Collect
To measure the effectiveness of our Web site, we collect some non-personal, generic information about visitors. This information may be described as "aggregated tracking information." Aggregated tracking information is data collected on visitors as a group, without any distinguishing characteristics from which individuals can be identified. For example, our Web server will recognize a visitor's domain type (i.e., .com, .gov, .edu), the Web page from and to which the visitor enters and exits our site, the pages visited, the visitor's Web browser, and how much time the visitor spends on each page. We aggregate this information to evaluate and improve our website.
How We Gather Information
We gather information dependent on your choice to provide information to us. Information you provide is retained to further the purpose for which you provided it.
Anonymous Users: We use a "cookie" to store information for a single visit to the website. A cookie is a small data file (a few lines of text) that is transmitted to your Web browser and then stored on your hard drive. When you return to our website, the cookie is transmitted back to our server. A cookie file can contain information that the site uses to track the pages you've visited. The only personal information a cookie can contain is information you supply. A cookie can't read data off your hard disk drive or read cookie files created by other sites. We will delete the cookie when you end your browser session (i.e., when you choose "Exit" in Netscape's File menu or "Close" in Internet Explorer's File menu)