Cookie Policy
We use cookies to make our websites more user-friendly. Find out about the main types of cookies we use, and what we use them for.
(Updated 19 February 2020)
The data we collect using cookies helps us understand our customers better so that we can provide a more focused user experience. Using the knowledge of your previous visits to our website, KeyStone can enhance subsequent visits by tailoring our content to match your requirements.
We use cookies principally because we want to make our websites and mobile applications user-friendly, and we are interested in anonymous user behaviour. Generally our cookies don’t store sensitive or personally identifiable information such as your name and address or credit card details.
In the unlikely event that our websites use cookies to store personal information about you, KeyStone encrypts the personal data to prevent unauthorised use by anyone else.
Here’s a list of the main types of cookies we use, and what we use them for.
(When we mention “cookies”, we also mean web beacons and other technologies that collect information in a similar way to cookies on websites or emails. When we mention “websites”, we also mean mobile applications and emails.)
Essential Cookies
Without these cookies, our site will not function.
NAME | DESCRIPTION |
---|---|
comment_author_[hash] comment_author_email_[hash] comment_author_url_[hash] | WordPress: The cookie comment_author_[hash] cookies is set to remember the value entered into the comment form’s name field, the cookie comment_author_email_[hash] is set to remember the value entered into the comment form’s email field and comment_author_url_[hash] is set to remember the value entered into the comment form’s URL field. |
wordpress_logged_in_[hash] wordpress_test_cookie wp-settings-{time}-[UID] wordpress_[hash] | WordPress uses the cookie wordpress_[hash] to store the authentication details on login. The authentication details include the username and double hashed copy of the password. |
wfwaf-authcookie- | Wordfence: This cookie is used by the Wordfence firewall to perform a capability check of the current user before WordPress has been loaded. |
How To Disable Cookies
You may be able to configure your browser or our website, application or service to restrict cookies or block all cookies if you wish, however if you disable cookies you may find this affects your ability to use certain parts of our website, applications or services. For more information about cookies and instructions on how to adjust your browser settings to accept, delete or reject cookies, see the www.allaboutcookies.org website.