Cookie Policy
This page explains the cookies and similar technologies used on UnspokenQuestions.com. It supplements the Privacy Policy.
What is a cookie?
A cookie is a small text file that a website (or one of its third-party partners) stores on your device. Cookies help the site work, measure how it is used, and — for some categories — personalize advertising. "Similar technologies" includes pixels, local storage, and SDK identifiers used by ad networks.
Categories used on this site
| Category | Purpose | Provider |
|---|---|---|
| Strictly necessary | Required to deliver pages and basic site functionality. | Hosting / CDN |
| Analytics | Aggregated traffic measurement — which pages get read, which devices and countries readers come from. | Google Analytics (GA4) |
| Advertising | Serving and measuring ads, including (where allowed) personalized ads, frequency capping, and fraud prevention. | Google AdSense and partner ad networks |
Google AdSense and partner cookies
Google and its advertising partners use cookies to serve ads based on a user's prior visits to this site and other websites. They may also collect information such as IP address, device identifiers, and rough location to combat fraud and to measure ad performance.
You can control how Google personalizes ads to you in Google Ads Settings. To opt out of personalized advertising from many networks at once, see aboutads.info/choices (Digital Advertising Alliance) or, in Europe, youronlinechoices.eu.
For Google's own description of how its advertising cookies work, see the Google Ad Technology Policies.
Analytics opt-out
To opt out of Google Analytics across sites, install the Google Analytics Opt-out Browser Add-on.
Browser-level controls
Most browsers let you block, restrict, or delete cookies. Settings vary by browser, but the following pages have current instructions:
Blocking all cookies will not break the site, but it may affect analytics collection and the relevance of any ads you see.
Do Not Track and Global Privacy Control
Some browsers send "Do Not Track" or "Global Privacy Control" signals. Where the law requires us to honor these signals — for example, under the California Consumer Privacy Act — we and our advertising partners will treat them as a request to opt out of the sale or sharing of personal information for cross-context behavioral advertising.
Changes to this page
If the categories or providers above change, we will update this page and the "Last reviewed" date.
Contact
Questions about cookies: [email protected].