Your Personal Information ColoradoBoarder.com will not sell, loan, rent, lease, barter or publish your personal information to a third party. All data that we keep on you is kept strictly for ColoradoBoarder.com business use to assist you in your current or future purchases or in analyzing sales trends. No customer data is stored on servers that are accessible to the Internet. All data is downloaded and deleted from our Web server many times a day.
Cookies and IP Numbers ColoradoBoarder.com's privacy policy shows our firm commitment to customer privacy. We use your IP address to help diagnose problems with our server, and to administer our Web site. Your IP address is used to help identify you and your shopping cart and to gather broad demographic information. Our site uses cookies to keep track of your shopping cart.
We use cookies for other purposes such as site personalization. You can reject cookies and still use the Dogfunk.com site, however, it will disable the ability for the site to recognize your cart, your account and any personalization efforts.
External Links This site contains links to other sites. ColoradoBoarder.com is not responsible for the privacy practices or the content of such Web sites.
The Scoop on Secure Transactions
Can I safely transmit information such as credit card numbers?
You can enter your credit card number on a secure (https) form and transmit the form over the Internet to a secure server without risk of an intermediary obtaining your credit card information. The security features offered by your web browser technology protects commercial transactions, as well as all other communications, from misappropriation and fraud that could otherwise occur as information passes through Internet computers.
With SSL implemented on both the client and server, your Internet communications are transmitted in encrypted form. Information you send can be trusted to arrive privately and unaltered to the server you specify (and no other).
SSL uses authentication and encryption technology. For example, your browsers export implementation of SSL (U.S. government approved) uses a High-grade, 128-bit key size. The encryption established between you and a server remains valid over multiple connections, yet the effort expended to defeat the encryption of one message cannot be leveraged to defeat the next message.
Your browser and secure servers deliver server authentication using signed digital certificates issued by trusted third parties known as certificate authorities. A digital certificate verifies the connection between a server's public key and the server's identification (just as a driver's license verifies the connection between your photograph and your personal identification. Cryptographic checks, using digital signatures, ensure that information within a certificate can be trusted.
You can tell when you have a secure connection by looking at the location (URL) field. If the URL begins with https:// (instead of http://), the document comes from a secure server. To connect to an HTTP server that provides security using the SSL protocol, insert the letter "s" so that the URL begins with https://. You need to use https:// for HTTP URLs with SSL and http:// for HTTP URLs without SSL..
You can also verify the security of a document by examining the security icon in the bottom-left corner of the browser window.
Only your computer and the server can encrypt and decrypt your information. In transit, the information is an unreadable jumble. An intermediary can continue to route the data, and even make copies of it, but the information cannot be decrypted and remains private and safely communicated.
If you ever have any questions feel free to contact us at:
info@coloradoboarder.com
888-766-7873
|