Privacy Policy
We here at StuffLabs don't like searching though complicated and hard to read Terms of Use and Privacy Policy pages. We don't like prospecting for nuggets of information hidden inside hard to read legalese. If we don't like reading it, we have no intention of writing it either -- at least until lawyers force us to. As such, we are going to try and explain our privacy policy as clearly as possible:
We believe your privacy is very important. As such we try and share as little information as possible. We will not share your email address. We will not contact you unless it is directly related to an order, an inquiry, a support matter, or something of that nature. We will only contact you with news, announcements, or the like, if you explicitly allow us to.
Our server logs information about visitors, which may include such information as IP addresses, the date and/or time visited, what website you may have come from, how long you were on our site, etc. We use this information how many people visit and use our site, how you may use our site, and other statistics.
The site does use browser cookies to track your session, for the shopping cart, and for collecting analytical data on your visit.
We use third-party services to send and receive, for our support page, our blog, and for web analytics. We also reserve the right to run advertisements on the site. We cannot control their actions, but we do not directly provide them with your name, email address(es), or other contact or personal information. Additionally we also try to work with companies that also value your privacy.
We also believe that you, as a user, should take an active role in safeguarding your security and privacy. Pick and use secure passwords. Do not share personal information (like passwords, or credit card information).
Here are some additional resources for learning how to protect yourself, your information, and your privacy (because of the way the world works, we
cannot explicitly endorse of vouch for everything on these sites, but we think they are pretty interesting and worth taking a look at):
- Microsoft's Password Security Page
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation's Privacy Top 12 list
- Tor a tool for anonymous browsing.
- privacy related websites and tools