Cookies
Manninck uses cookies (and other techniques) and collects information about the use of the website, among other things, to analyze and improve it, for social media and to ensure that you see relevant information and advertisements. By using this website, you agree to the use of cookies and the collection of information based on them by us and by third parties on the websites of Manninck.
Our privacy and cookie statement applies to the use of information collected by Manninck using cookies. Button to the privacy and cookie statement
By using our website you agree to the use of the following cookies:
Analytical cookies
Manninck uses analytical cookies to keep track of visitor statistics, among other things. This gives us better insight into the functioning of the website. Analytical cookies have little effect on privacy.
Functional cookies
Functional Cookies are necessary to make a website function better. These are, for example, files that keep track of what is in a shopping cart.
Tracking cookies
Your permission is required for this. The visitor is tracked during the visit to the website and possibly afterwards. This is privacy sensitive information.
Websites must always ask permission to place Cookies that infringe on privacy. These are often 'tracking' Cookies. As mentioned, these Cookies track individual surfing behavior and create profiles to enable, for example, targeted advertisements (retargeting).
Websites can also process personal data when placing Cookies. Your bank does this, for example. The Personal Data Protection Act applies to these Cookies.
Third party cookies
Some websites allow other websites to place Cookies on the user's computer. We call these types of Cookies Third Party Cookies.
How does this work? A website gives an advertiser (third party) permission to place a Cookie. That advertiser then knows that you have visited the aforementioned website. The advantage for the advertiser arises when the visitor comes to another website that has also given permission to the same advertiser to place Cookies. The advertiser can then read the Cookie of the first website, and in this way the advertiser knows that you have visited both websites. In this way he has more information than the websites in question separately.
Cookies that enable people to be 'followed' are called tracking cookies.
Flash Cookies
Flash Cookies are Cookies that use Adobe Flash. In the past, they were difficult to remove and impossible to stop. With the cooperation of Adobe, the new generation of browsers (since 2011) treat Flash Cookies as regular Cookies and are therefore also blocked and removed upon request.
Do you want to give limited or no permission for the use of cookies? Then use the button below to indicate on the cookie settings page which cookies may or may not be used on our website. BUTTON to cookie settings on / off
The settings page can always be reached via the Privacy and Cookie Policy link at the bottom of every page, so you can change your choice at any time.
Cookies (and other similar techniques such as JavaScript) ensure, for example, that you can remain logged in to a website or that your location and language settings are remembered (functional). In addition, they keep track of your digital shopping cart when shopping online. Cookies also allow website owners to see how often their sites – and which pages – are viewed by visitors (statistics). Cookies are used when using the Like button (social media), for example, but also to prevent you from seeing the same advertisement 20 times a day (advertisements). Cookies also make it possible to track information about your use across multiple websites. In this way, sites and advertisers may be able to say something about your preferences, so that they can show more relevant information and/or advertisements (interests). Thanks to cookies, the advertisements are tailored as much as possible to your own interests. If you disable cookies, you will still see advertisements, but at most they will no longer be tailored to your interests.