Privacy Policy
This page describes how www.radiograce.org handles information that we learn about
Internet users upon visiting the Web sites we operate or by contacting us by mail, fax, or email.
Any personally identifying information you provide is voluntary. We use it to fulfill a request you
make or to assist us in carrying out our mission; it may be disclosed to others for such purposes.
If you visit our Web sites to browse, read, or download information:
- We automatically collect and store: the name of the domain and host from which you access
the Internet; the Internet protocol (IP) address of the computer you are using; the browser
software you use and your operating system; the date and time you access our sites; and the
Internet address of the site from which you linked directly to our sites.
- We use this information only as anonymous aggregate data to determine the number of
visitors to different sections of our sites, to ensure the sites are working properly, and to help
us make our sites more useful. We do not use it to track or record information about individuals.
Generally, we delete this information after it is evaluated.
- We may use cookies to anonymously collect a visitor's IP address and the date and time of the
visit. We use these cookies for site management purposes.
If you choose to identify yourself when you write us or send us email:
Information We Collect
- We collect any personally identifying information, such as your name, street address, email
address, and phone number, and any other information you provide to us.
- In accordance with the Children's
Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA), we ask that no user of our site who is under the age of
13 submit any identifying information in conjunction with an effort to contact
us.
How We Use and Disclose Information:
If you are over 13 years old and choose to provide personally identifying information to us, we
will use and disclose it as described in this Privacy Policy. If you do not provide your name or other
identifying information, it may be impossible for us to refer, respond to, or investigate your complaint
or request. We may share your information with contractors acting on our behalf, such as call center
operators and/or others, who are subject to confidentiality agreements.
- If you contact us to order publications, we use the information you provide to fulfill your order
or contact you about your order.
- If you contact us to ask a question or make a comment, we use that information to respond to
your contact.
- In other circumstances, including requests from private individuals or companies, during
litigation and/or for routine uses, we may be required or authorized or required by law to
disclose the information you provide.
Here's what you should know about the security of the information you provide to us:
- We use secure socket layer (SSL) encryption to protect the transmission of the information
you submit to us when you use our secure online forms. The information you provide to us is
stored securely.
- Email that you send us is not necessarily secure against interception. If your email
communication includes sensitive information like your Social Security number, your bank
account number, or your credit or charge card number, contact us by fax
or mail.
Here's how to contact us:
If you have questions or complaints regarding our privacy policy or use of your information, please
contact us at info@radiograce.org, or by mail at:
RadioGrace.org
10 Shurs Lane
Philadelphia, PA 19127
- Our websites link to documents located on sites maintained by other companies, agencies,
and/or organizations. Once you access another site, you are subject to the privacy policy of that
site.
Cookie
A "cookie" is a small text file that a website can place on your computer's hard drive in order,
for example, to collect information about your activities on the site or to make it possible for you
to use an online "shopping car" to keep track of items you wish to purchase. The cookie transmits
this information back to the Web site's computer which, generally speaking, is the only computer
that can read it. Many consumers do not know that "cookies" are being placed on their computers
when they visit websites. If you want to know when this happens, or to prevent it from happening,
you can set your browser to warn you when a website attempts to place a "cookie" on your
computer.