This page explains the cookies that washingtonexaminer.co.uk sets when you visit, why we set them, and how you can refuse or delete them.
What is a cookie
A cookie is a small text file written to your device by a website. It typically holds a unique identifier and an expiry date. The site can read its own cookies again on later visits.
Cookies we set
The Washington Examiner sets a minimal set of first-party cookies. We do not set advertising or cross-site tracking cookies. The cookies we set are:
- Functional session cookies — used by our content-delivery layer (Cloudflare) to route requests reliably. These are set by Cloudflare and are necessary for the site to function.
- Performance counter — a single anonymous identifier that lets us count unique visitors per article without tracking individuals across sites. Expires after thirty days.
Third parties
We do not embed advertising trackers, social-media pixels, marketing analytics tools, or third-party recommendation widgets on this site. The contact form is processed by Web3Forms (web3forms.com); if you submit the form, that service writes a short-lived cookie to log the submission.
How to refuse or delete cookies
You can refuse or delete cookies in your browser settings. Modern browsers let you block cookies entirely, block third-party cookies, or clear all cookies at the end of every session. Refer to your browser's help pages for the exact controls. Refusing cookies will not stop you reading the site, though some Cloudflare-set functional cookies may be re-issued on every visit.
Changes to this policy
If we add or remove cookies materially we will update the date at the top of this page.
