We respect your privacy! Any and all information collected at this site will be kept strictly confidential and will not be sold, reused, rented, loaned, or otherwise disclosed. Any information you give to Camas/Washougal Chamber of Commerce will be held with the utmost care, and will not be used in ways that you have not consented to. A more detailed explanation about how we safeguard your personal information is described below. If you have any questions, please don't hesitate to contact us at info@cwchamber.com.
Resale or disclosure of information to third parties:
Camas/Washougal Chamber of Commerce does not sell, rent, loan, trade, or lease any personal information collected at our site, including membership forms or email lists.
Browser information collected on the website:
Camas/Washougal Chamber of Commerce analyzes our website logs to constantly improve the value of the materials available on website. Our website logs are not personally identifiable, and we make no attempt to link them with the individuals that actually browse the site.
Use of cookies:
Camas/Washougal Chamber of Commerce DOES NOT use cookies on this site. See Cookie Section below for more information.
Privacy of our email lists:
Camas/Washougal Chamber of Commerce maintains several email
lists to keep our members informed about breaking events. Individuals
must affirmatively ask to join our mailing lists by contacting
Camas/Washougal Chamber of Commerce staff directly at web
based form or emailing us at info@cwchamber.com.
We do not sell, rent, loan, trade, or lease the addresses on
our list to anyone. In addition, we configure our list server
software to refuse to divulge the email addresses of our list
subscribers to anyone but authorized Camas/Washougal Chamber
of Commerce staff, including other list subscribers.
A Cookie is:
A very small text file placed on your hard drive by a Web Page
server. It is essentially your identification card, and cannot
be executed as code or deliver viruses. It is uniquely yours
and can only be read by the server that gave it to you.
A Cookie's Purpose is:
To tell the server that you returned to that Web page.
How a Cookie Helps You:
It saves you time. If you personalize pages, or register for products or services, a cookie helps the web site remember who you are. Next time you return, the web site knows to show you the information you requested. Or, when you register for another product or service, all you need to do is type in your e-mail address and a password. The web site then can fill in any questions you've already answered. Of course, if you never register or leave personal information with the web server then the server only knows that someone with a cookie has returned to the Web site. You are in charge of deciding whether the web site knows anything about you..
How a Cookie Helps Camas/Washougal Chamber of Commerce:
Camas/Washougal Chamber of Commerce utilizes cookies within
it many applications to allow for a better online experience.
Cookies better enable you to sort and find articles and businesses
within your area.
If You Want to Control Which Cookies You Accept:
You can order your browser to accept all cookies or to alert you every time a cookie is offered. Then you can decide whether to accept one or not.
If you're using Internet Explorer 5.0:
1. Choose Tools, then
2. Internet Options.
3. Click the Security tab,
4. Click Internet, then Custom Level.
5. Scroll down to Cookies and choose one of the two options.
If you're using Internet Explorer 4.0:
1. Choose View, then
2. Internet Options.
3. Click the Advanced tab,
4. Scroll down to the yellow exclamation icon under Security and choose
one of the three options to regulate your use of cookies.
In Internet Explorer 3.0, you can View, Options, Advanced and click on the button that says Warn Before Accepting "Cookies.",
If you're using Netscape Communicator 4.0:
On your Task Bar, click:
1. Edit, then
2. Preferences, then
3. click on Advanced.
4. Set your options in the box labeled "Cookies".
How to See Cookies You've Accepted:
If you're using Internet Explorer 5.0
On your task bar, click:
1. Tools, then
2. Internet Options.
3. Under the tab General (the default tab) click
4. Settings, then
5. View Files.
If you're using Internet Explorer 4.0
On your task bar, click:
1. View, then
2. Internet Options.
3. Under the tab General (the default tab) click
4. Settings, then
5. View Files.
Internet Explorer 3.0
On your Task Bar, click:
1. View, then
2. Options, then
3. Advanced, then
4. View Files.
Netscape Communicator 4.0:
Netscape bundles all cookies into one file on your hard drive. You'll need to find the file, which it calls Cookie.txt on Windows machines.
How to See the Code in a Cookie:
Just click on a cookie to open it. You'll see a short string of text and numbers. The numbers are your identification card, which can only be seen by the server that gave you the cookie.