A cookie is a simple small file that is sent along with pages from this website and stored by your browser on the hard drive of your computer. The information stored therein can be sent back to our servers on a subsequent visit.
Where do cookies come from?
Based on the origin of cookies, we make a distinction between first-party and third-party cookies.
First party cookies are cookies that this site manages, they are specific to this website and have a specific function such as making this website / service function properly on the website.
Third party cookies are cookies that we do not manage or place on this website ourselves, they come from a third party. It is possible that third party cookies are placed when using this website. These cookies ensure that certain data is sent to third parties when you visit this website. An example of this are social media cookies or cookies for statistics. Even though we do not place / manage these cookies ourselves, we do everything we can to ensure that their placement is as controlled as possible. At the bottom of this page you can find an overview of the cookies that are placed by third parties.
In some cases, other cookies may be placed by trusted third parties, depending on the content you see on the website. For example an embedded youtube or vimeoplayer.
Types of cookies used on this website
There are several cookies that we use on this website, each of which has its own function. The cookies used on this website can be divided into different categories. Below an overview.
These cookies are necessary for the website to function properly and cannot be disabled. These are usually set in response to visitor actions, such as setting privacy preferences, filling out a contact form or logging in to the website.
2 types of cookies are used within wordpress: Users cookies and Commenters cookies.
Users Cookies are placed when a user logs in to the backend, this contains the authentication data of a user. These cookies expire after 15 days.
Commenters Cookies: When a user leaves a comment on the site, WordPress automatically sets a cookie with the user’s name, email address and URL. This cookie allows WordPress to automatically fill username, email and URL fields on subsequent visits by the user. The comment cookie expires in 347,222 days or 30,000,000 seconds.
More information about the cookies that wordpress places can be found on their website: https://wordpress.org/support/article/ cookies /
These cookies collect general information about how a visitor uses the website. This is information such as with which device do you view our website or how much time do you spend on a web page. With such information we can make analyzes to improve the website. We use Google Analytics to collect this information.
For more information on how the information is processed, see “How Google uses cookies”: https://policies.google .com / technologies / cookies
If you want to disable Google Analytics in your browser, please see Google’s instructions:
These cookies are used to track the surfing behavior of a visitor and then compile a user profile from this information. This profile can then be used to display appropriate and personalized advertisements on other sites.
Enabling and disabling cookies and removing them
If you wish to visit this website, we recommend that you enable cookies. You are completely free to delete certain cookies in your browser.
You can enable or disable cookies via the settings of your browser. Below you can find some links with more information about this:
Detailed list of cookies
Name |
Function |
Lifetime |
Provider |
PHPSESSID |
Preserves user session state across page requests. The PHPSESSID cookie is native to PHP and enables websites to store serialised state data. On the website it is used to establish a user session and to pass state data via a temporary cookie, which is commonly referred to as a session cookie. Stores unique session ID. |
session |
|
wordpress_ |
WordPress cookie for a logged in user. |
session |
|
wordpress_logged_in_ |
WordPress cookie for a logged in user. |
session |
|
wordpress_test_ |
WordPress cookie for a logged in user. |
session |
|
wordpress_test_cookie |
WordPress test cookie. |
session |
|
wp-settings- |
WordPress also sets a few wp-settings-[UID] cookies. The number on the end is your individual user ID from the users database table. This is used to customize your view of admin interface, and possibly also the main site interface. |
session |
|
wp-settings-time- |
WordPress also sets a few wp-settings-{time}-[UID] cookies. The number on the end is your individual user ID from the users database table. This is used to customize your view of admin interface, and possibly also the main site interface. |
session |
|
moove_gdpr_popup |
It stores user preferences for cookies |
1 year |
|
_ga |
Used to distinguish users. |
2 years |
Google analytics |
_gid |
Used to distinguish users. |
24 hours |
Google analytics |
_gat |
Used to throttle request rate. If Google Analytics is deployed via Google Tag Manager, this cookie will be named _dc_gtm_<property-id>. |
1 minute |
Google analytics |
_gac_<property-id> |
Contains campaign related information for the user. If you have linked your Google Analytics and AdWords accounts, AdWords website conversion tags will read this cookie unless you opt-out.
Expiration: |
90 days |
Google analytics |
AMP_TOKEN |
Contains a token that can be used to retrieve a Client ID from AMP Client ID service. Other possible values indicate opt-out, inflight request or an error retrieving a Client ID from AMP Client ID service |
1 year |
Google analytics |
collect |
Used to send data to Google Analytics about the visitor’s device and behaviour. Tracks the visitor across devices and marketing channels. |
session |
Google analytics |
_GRECAPTCHA |
This cookie is set by Google. In addition to certain standard Google cookies, reCAPTCHA sets a necessary cookie (_GRECAPTCHA) when executed for the purpose of providing its risk analysis. |
5 months 27 days |
reCAPTCHA |