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Privacy
Policy
Please
read the following policy to understand how your personal information
will be treated as you make full use of our many offerings. This policy
may change from time to time so please check back periodically.
What personally
identifiable information does CEPR collect from
me?
What are cookies and how
does CEPR use them?
What personally
identifiable information does CEPR collect from
me?
We ask for your name and email address when
you register. We also may ask you for personal information at other times.
Including (but not only) when you register for CEPR meetings online, track
a Discussion Paper submission or purchase a publication from CEPR. CEPR
also occasionally asks users to complete surveys that we use for research.
The more information you volunteer (and the more accurate it is), the
better we are able to customise your experience.

What are cookies and how
does CEPR use them?
As part of offering and providing
customisable and personalised services, CEPR uses cookies
to store and sometimes track information about you. A cookie is a small
amount of data that is sent to your browser from a web server and stored
on your computer's hard drive. All sites where you are prompted
to log-in or that are customisable require that you accept cookies.
Generally, we use cookies to:
-
Remind us of who you are and to access
your account information (stored on our computers) in order to deliver to
you a better and more personalised service. This cookie is set when you
register or "Log in" and is modified when you "log out" of our services.
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Estimate our audience size. Each
browser accessing CEPR is given a unique cookie which is then used to
determine the extent of repeat usage, usage by a registered user versus by
an unregistered user, and to help target our content.
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Track your progress and see the number of
times you have participated in CEPR conferences, workshops or meetings,
downloaded discussion papers or ordered publications.
- Measure certain traffic patterns, which
areas of CEPR's web site you have visited, and your visiting
patterns in the aggregate. We use this research to understand how our
users' habits are similar or different from one another so that we can
make each visit to the site a better one. We may use this
information to better personalise the content
that you and other users will see on our sites.
We also collect IP
addresses for system administration.

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