RedRadar Technologies Cookie Statement

Last updated: April 2026

This Cookies Notice ("Notice") explains how RedRadar Technologies Inc. ("RedRadar") use cookies and similar technologies on our websites and other online services. This Notice forms part of our Privacy Statement and explains:

Sites covered by this Notice

This Notice applies to the following sites we operate:

What cookies are

Cookies are small text files that a website places on your computer or mobile device when you visit it. They are widely used to make websites work, to remember your preferences between visits, and to give site operators information about how their sites are used. Cookies cannot, on their own, identify you personally; they identify the browser on the device you used to visit the site, and any preferences or behavior associated with that browser. We also use similar technologies that work in comparable ways. In this Notice, when we refer to "cookies," we mean cookies and these similar technologies together unless we say otherwise.

Session vs. persistent cookies

How long a cookie stays on your device depends on whether it is a "session" or "persistent" cookie:

First-party vs. third-party cookies

Who owns and controls a cookie depends on whether it is a "first-party" or "third-party" cookie:

Similar technologies we use

In addition to cookies, we may or may not potentially use the following technologies (or similar), which work in comparable ways: Web beacons (also known as pixel tags, internet tags, or clear GIFs) are tiny graphics embedded in a web page or email that record information about a visitor or recipient — for example, that a page was viewed or an email was opened. Web beacons may also collect information such as the IP address and browser type of the visitor. Local storage (including HTML5 localStorage and sessionStorage) is used by web applications to store small amounts of data on your device, typically to remember choices you have made or to cache information for better performance. Software development kits (SDKs) are bundles of code that can collect information about how an application or page is used. We may use SDKs from analytics or infrastructure providers to support core site functionality. References in this Notice to "cookies" include all of the above unless we specify otherwise.

Categories of cookies we use, and our legal basis

We use cookies in two categories. We do not use any other category.

Strictly necessary cookies

Strictly necessary cookies are required for our sites to function. Without them, basic features such as page navigation, security, form submission, and remembering your cookie preferences would not work. What these cookies do on our sites:

Analytics cookies

Analytics cookies help us understand how visitors use our sites — which pages are read, how visitors arrive, where the site is slow or confusing — so we can improve the experience. What these cookies do on our sites:

What we do not use

We do not use, and do not allow third parties to use on our sites, any of the following:

How long cookies stay on your device

How to control cookies

You have several ways to control which cookies are set on your device.

Through our cookie banner

When you first visit our sites, our cookie banner asks you to accept or decline non-essential cookies. You can change your choice at any time by reopening the cookie settings from the link in the website footer. Withdrawing consent does not affect the lawfulness of any processing that took place before the withdrawal.

Through your browser

Most browsers let you view, manage, block, and delete cookies, either site by site or across all sites. The exact steps depend on the browser you use. For mobile devices, the equivalent settings are usually found in the privacy or content settings of your mobile browser, or in the system settings of your device. If you block strictly necessary cookies, parts of our sites may stop working as expected.

Through your device

Most operating systems offer device-level privacy and tracking controls — for example, the App Tracking Transparency setting on iOS and the equivalent controls on Android. These work alongside the controls in your browser.

Do Not Track and Global Privacy Control

We recognize Global Privacy Control (GPC) signals where required by applicable law and treat them as an opt-out from any sale or sharing of personal information for cross-context behavioral advertising. As described above, we do not engage in cross-context behavioral advertising in any case, but the GPC signal is honored consistently. We do not currently respond to legacy "Do Not Track" browser signals because no consistent industry standard has emerged for them. We will revisit this position if a standard is adopted.

Changes to this Notice

We may update this Notice from time to time to reflect changes in the cookies we use, in our service providers, or in legal or regulatory requirements. The "Last updated" date at the top of this Notice indicates when the most recent change was made. Material changes will be notified through our cookie banner or through a notice on the site. We encourage you to review this Notice periodically to stay informed about our use of cookies.