Essence of a cookie
A cookie is a modest text fragment that your browser stores so servers can recognise returning visitors, honour preferences, or—when lawfully permitted—assemble anonymised statistics. Contemporaneous cousins include local storage keys, session storage pulses, pixel tags, and software development kits embedded only after consent.
Custodian and reverent contact
Vythreonkhapel.worldBulevardi 13 · 00120 Helsinki · Finland
question@vythreonkhapel.world
Consent theatre and its serious backend
Upon entry you encounter a banner offering Accept all, Reject,
or Cookie settings. Strictly necessary signals deploy immediately because
without them no secure session or fraud defence could exist. Analytics and marketing layers
initialise only after affirmative toggles or a whole-hearted accept. Your verdict is mirrored
into localStorage key wenora_cookie_prefs_v1, creating durable proof
of decision without exposing personal narratives.
Instrument inventory & notional lifetimes
- Strictly necessary: routing affinity, rate limiting fingerprints, CSRF companions, consent receipts—sessional to twelve months depending on role.
- Analytics (opt-in): pseudonymous page choreography, conversion funnels, error telemetry—typically thirteen months unless you withdraw sooner.
- Marketing (opt-in): attribution partners, creative rotation diagnostics—retention governed by partner contracts trimmed to EU minima.
Concrete cookie names evolve as vendors release revisions; substantive mutations trigger a renewed notice cycle.
Revocation, browser mutiny, and silent failures
You may replay preferences anytime by clearing site storage or requesting a reset link from support. Browser-level blocking may cripple checkout or captcha flows; we document such conflicts in our FAQ. If you withdraw analytics consent mid-session, residual pings already dispatched cannot be retracted from logs but future emissions halt.
Third-party elevations & SCC posture
Optional cookies occasionally invoke vendors whose legal residence spans the Atlantic. Where EU adequacy does not exist we bind them through Standard Contractual Clauses, supplemental technical measures, and periodic reassessment following Schrems II jurisprudence.