We at Vobe Interiors are committed to protecting your privacy and security of information. Vobe Interiors will not sell, share, or give away any personal information that we receive regarding our customers. We use the information we collect about you to process orders and to provide a more personalized shopping experience. When you order, we need to know the following details:- Name, Address, Phone Number, Email Address and Credit Card Details. All of the supplied details EXCEPT your credit card details are stored with Vobe Interiors. Furthermore all of the customer's data we collect is protected against unauthorized access.
We may from time to time send you additional information on new products or special offers at Vobe Interiors. However, you can be omitted from this mailing list by simply emailing us at [email protected]. The information we hold will be accurate and up to date. You can check the information that we hold about you by emailing us at [email protected]. If you find any inaccuracies we will delete or correct it promptly. The personal information, which we hold, will be held securely in accordance with our internal security policy and the law.
We may use technology to track patterns of behavior of visitors to our site. This can include using a 'cookie' which would be stored on your browser. You can usually modify your browser to prevent this happening. The information collected in this way can be used to identify you unless you modify your browser setting. If you have any questions / comments about privacy, you should email us at [email protected]
Vobe Interiors process payments using WorldNet. WorldNet is an Irish based company offering payment processing services for businesses selling online. Founded in 2007, it is now one of Europe's leading online payment gateways. We chose WorldNet because their main focuses are customer service and security and for more details on the security service that they offer, you can follow the link below. Vobe are committed to ensuring that your information is secure. In order to prevent unauthorized access or disclosure, we have put in place suitable electronic measures to safeguard and secure the information we collect online.
Vobe Interiors will not sell, or share your personal information to third parties unless we have your permission or are required by law to do so. If you have signed up to receive marketing emails and wish to opt out this can be done easily by hitting the unsubscribe button in your email which will remove your data from our mailing list
Cookie Collection started as an EU Directive that was adopted by all EU countries in May 2011. The Directive gave individuals rights to refuse the use of cookies that reduce their online privacy. Customers will see a small pop up banner on our site asking to accept or deny cookie collection. Overall, cookies help us better understand what is and is not of interest to you as our valued customer and what is monitor which will give you a better experience on our website
Cookies help associate website activity with a specific user. A session cookie contains a unique string (a combination of letters and numbers) that matches a user session with relevant data and content for that user.
Suppose Alice has an account on a shopping website. She logs into her account from the website's homepage. When she logs in, the website's server generates a session cookie and sends the cookie to Alice's browser. This cookie tells the website to load Alice's account content, so that the homepage now reads, "Welcome, Alice."
Alice then clicks to a product page displaying a pair of jeans. When Alice's web browser sends an HTTP request to the website for the jeans product page, it includes Alice's session cookie with the request. Because the website has this cookie, it recognizes the user as Alice, and she does not have to log in again when the new page loads.
Cookies help a website "remember" user actions or user preferences, enabling the website to customize the user's experience.
If Alice logs out of the shopping website, her username can be stored in a cookie and sent to her web browser. Next time she loads that website, the web browser sends this cookie to the web server, which then prompts Alice to log in with the username she used last time.
Some cookies record and track what websites users visit. This information is sent to the server that originated the cookie the next time the browser has to load content from that server. With third-party tracking cookies, this process takes place anytime the browser loads a website that uses that tracking service.
If Alice has previously visited a website that sent her browser a tracking cookie, this cookie may record that Alice is now viewing a product page for jeans. The next time Alice loads a website that uses this tracking service, she may see ads for jeans.
However, advertising is not the only use for tracking cookies. Many analytics services also use tracking cookies to anonymously record user activity
As described above, cookies can be used to record browsing activity, including for advertising purposes. However, many users do not want their online behavior to be tracked. Users also lack visibility or control over what tracking services do with the data they collect. If you are a user which does not wish to accept cookies simply hit deny all in the privacy pop up banner when you arrive onto the Vobe site
Even when cookie-based tracking is not tied to a specific user's name or device, with some types of tracking it could still be possible to link a record of a user's browsing activity with their real identity. This information could be used in any number of ways, from unwanted advertising to the monitoring, stalking, or harassment of users. (This is not the case with all cookie usage.)
Some privacy laws, like the EU's ePrivacy Directive, address and govern the use of cookies. Under this directive, users have to provide "informed consent" — they have to be notified of how the website uses cookies and agree to this usage — before the website can use cookies. (The exception to this is cookies that are "strictly necessary" for the website to function.) The EU's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) considers cookie identifiers to be personal data, so its rules apply to cookie usage in the EU as well. Also, any personal data collected by cookies falls under the GDPR's jurisdiction.
Largely because of these laws, many websites now display cookie banners that allow users to review and control the cookies those websites use.