Cookies

Cookie Policy

What they are, why we use them, and how to control them. Cookies keep the site working and keep it free through advertising — and you stay in control of the non-essential ones.

Last updated: June 2026

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1. What are cookies and similar technologies

Cookies are small text files placed on your device when you visit a website. Similar technologies — including local storage, pixels (web beacons) and software development kits — work in comparable ways. Together they let a site remember actions and preferences and help measure and serve advertising. Cookies can be “first-party” (set by us) or “third-party” (set by our partners), and “session” (deleted when you close the browser) or “persistent” (kept for a set time).

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2. Why we use them

We use these technologies to keep the site secure and functioning, to remember preferences such as your language and your consent choices, to understand usage in aggregate, and — through our advertising partners — to show the ads that keep SnapSave free.

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3. Categories of cookies we use

Category What it does Set by Typical duration
Strictly necessary Security, load balancing and core functionality SnapSave Session – 1 year
Preferences Remember choices such as language and consent SnapSave Up to 1 year
Analytics Measure traffic and usage in aggregate Analytics provider Up to 2 years
Advertising Serve ads and, where permitted, personalise and measure them Google AdSense & partners Up to 2 years
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4. Examples of advertising cookies

Example identifier Provider Purpose
__gads / __gpi Google Ad delivery, frequency capping and measurement
IDE / DSID Google (DoubleClick) Ad personalisation and conversion measurement
test_cookie Google Check whether the browser supports cookies
NID / ANID Google Preferences and ad-related functions

Exact cookies may vary; this list is illustrative of the advertising cookies a Google-served site commonly sets.

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5. Third-party and advertising cookies

Some cookies are set by third parties, most importantly our advertising partner Google AdSense and the vendors it works with. These serve ads and, where permitted, personalise them and measure their performance.

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6. Personalised vs non-personalised ads

Where you consent (or where the law allows), you may see personalised ads based on cookie data. Where you do not consent — for example in the EEA, UK and Switzerland — ads may still be shown on a non-personalised basis, which relies on contextual information rather than your profile.

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8. How to manage cookies in your browser

You can block or delete cookies in your browser settings at any time:

Blocking strictly necessary cookies may stop parts of the site from working correctly.
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9. Do Not Track

Because there is no agreed industry standard for “Do Not Track” signals, we manage choices through the consent banner and the opt-out tools above; where required by law we honour recognised opt-out preference signals.

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10. Changes and more information

We may update this Cookie Policy as our cookies or the law change; the latest version is always on this page. For how we handle personal data more generally, see our Privacy Policy.

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