What cookies actually do on this site, explained plainly
Cookie policies are usually dense and hard to skim. This one isn’t. It explains what a cookie actually is, which types AIBizMaster uses and why, and exactly how to control or turn them off — with the full legal detail included, not hidden behind jargon.
Last updated: — placeholder date; set to the actual publish date
What a cookie actually is, and why they exist
A cookie is a small text file a website asks your browser to store on your device. It doesn’t run programs, and it can’t reach into your files — it just holds a small piece of information, like “this visitor is already logged in” or “this visitor came from a specific link,” that the site can read back on a later visit.
Cookies exist because the web is fundamentally stateless: without them, every page you load would treat you as a brand-new visitor with no memory of anything you just did. Cookies are the mechanism that lets a site remember you across a session, or across visits, well enough to function normally.
Key Takeaways
- Cookies are small data files, not programs — they can’t access your other files or run code.
- We use a small number of categories, not dozens of tracking mechanisms.
- You control cookies through your browser at any time — this page shows you exactly how.
The lifecycle of a cookie, step by step
Here’s what actually happens, technically, from the moment you land on a page.
Set
Your browser receives a small instruction to store a cookie when you load a page.
Stored
The cookie sits in your browser’s storage, tied to this specific site.
Sent back
On your next visit, your browser sends the cookie back so the site can recognize the context.
Expires or deleted
The cookie disappears automatically after its set duration, or sooner if you delete it manually.
The types of cookies we use, and why
A quick-glance view first, then full detail below — click any category to expand it.
Essential
Core site functionality — can’t be disabled individually.
Functional
Remembers preferences like FAQ state or accordion selections.
Analytics
Helps us understand which content is actually useful.
Performance
Monitors load times and technical errors.
Advertising
Supports any paid placements, where applicable.
Affiliate Tracking
Credits a signup referral to AIBizMaster.
Third-Party
Set by external services we use, under their own policies.
Embedded Content
Only present if a page embeds outside content directly.
These make the site work at a basic level — things like remembering that you’ve already dismissed a notice within the same session, or supporting core security functions. Without them, some parts of the site may not function correctly.
These remember small preferences to make your visit smoother — for example, which FAQ section you had open, or a display preference you set. They don’t identify you personally beyond your browser session.
If an analytics platform is installed, these cookies help us understand aggregate patterns — which articles get read, how people navigate the site — so we can improve content, not to track any single visitor’s identity across the web.
These help identify slow-loading pages or technical errors so we can fix them, distinct from analytics that focus on content engagement rather than technical health.
Where a paid placement or sponsorship is displayed, its own tracking cookies may be set, consistent with our Advertising & Sponsorship Policy. These do not affect editorial content or scoring in any way.
When you click a disclosed affiliate link, a short-lived cookie or URL parameter tells the destination vendor the referral came from AIBizMaster, so any resulting signup can be credited to us. This costs you nothing extra — see our Affiliate Disclosure for the full picture.
Some cookies on the site may be set by external services we rely on for hosting, security, or content delivery, rather than by AIBizMaster directly. Those providers’ own privacy practices govern how that data is handled.
Cookies from third-party services and embedded content
If a page embeds outside content directly — for example, a video player or a social media post — that embed can set its own cookies under the third party’s own policy, separate from anything AIBizMaster controls directly.
Confirm whether AIBizMaster actually embeds third-party content anywhere on the site (video, social posts, interactive widgets), and name each service specifically. Also confirm and name the actual analytics platform, advertising platform, and hosting/CDN provider referenced throughout this page — see the equivalent flags on our Privacy Policy for the same items.
Managing cookie preferences and browser controls
You’re always in control — here’s where to go in each major browser.
Chrome
Manage or clear cookies in Chrome’s settings.
Firefox
Control tracking protection and cookies.
Safari
Manage cookies and website data on Mac.
Edge
Delete or manage cookies in Edge.
Cookie preference checklist
Opting out, and how we handle Do Not Track signals
Opting out: Beyond browser-level controls, some analytics and advertising providers offer their own opt-out tools. Where applicable, we’ll link to those directly once the specific providers are confirmed (see the review note in Section 04).
Do Not Track signals: Some browsers let you send a “Do Not Track” signal. There’s currently no single agreed technical standard for how sites should respond to it, so — consistent with most major websites — we don’t currently change site behavior based on this signal. Using your browser’s direct cookie controls remains the most reliable way to manage tracking.
How long cookies stick around
| Category | Typical duration |
|---|---|
| Essential | Session (deleted when you close your browser) |
| Functional | Session to a few weeks, depending on the preference |
| Analytics | Varies by platform — commonly up to 1–2 years |
| Affiliate tracking | Short window after click-through, set by the destination vendor |
| Advertising | Varies by platform, where applicable |
Replace the general durations above with the actual configured lifespans once the specific analytics/advertising platforms are confirmed — exact cookie names and expiry periods should be listed here for full transparency where feasible.
GDPR, CCPA, and international considerations
GDPR considerations: For visitors in the EEA and UK, non-essential cookies (such as analytics or advertising) generally require your consent before being set. If a consent mechanism is installed, it should be described specifically here rather than assumed.
CCPA considerations: California residents have the right to opt out of the “sale” or “sharing” of personal information, which can include certain advertising cookie practices. We do not sell personal information, as detailed in our Privacy Policy.
International visitors: Cookie laws vary by country. Wherever you’re located, the browser-level controls described in Section 05 let you manage cookies regardless of local regulation.
Updates to this policy, and how to reach us
If our cookie practices change — a new analytics tool, a new advertising partner — the “Last updated” date at the top of this page will change, and the update will be described here directly. Questions about this policy can go to our Contact page or directly to [email protected].
Frequently asked questions
Practical questions people have about cookies specifically.
Essential cookies are needed for basic site functionality and can’t be turned off individually, but you can block all cookies through your browser, which may affect how parts of the site work.
There is no single agreed technical standard for Do Not Track, so most websites, including many major publications, don’t currently change behavior based on it. Regardless, you can control cookies directly through your browser settings.
It depends on the cookie type. Session cookies expire when you close your browser; persistent cookies last for a set period, which varies by category and is detailed in the sections above.
Affiliate tracking typically uses a short-lived parameter in the link URL or a cookie to credit a referral to AIBizMaster when you sign up for a tool — it identifies the referral source, not you personally.
Yes. Every major browser lets you view and delete stored cookies, either for a specific site or all at once, through its privacy or settings menu.
Blocking essential cookies may affect basic functionality. Blocking analytics or advertising cookies typically has no effect on your ability to read and use the site normally.
This page focuses specifically on cookies and similar tracking technologies. Our Privacy Policy covers how we handle personal information more broadly.
Have a question about cookies or tracking?
Email our privacy team directly, or use our general contact form for anything else.