Data privacy
We don’t save anything about the visitors of djil.de.
»Nothing at all?« Nothing at all.
No Cookies
We store practically no cookie when delivering any publicly accessable page on djil.de.
Even on the page for newsletter subscription handled via the commercial service provider Mailjet/Pathwire your Browser won’t set a cookie. Caveat: this subscription form is embedded as an iFrame, therefore it could be modified by the service provider without the knowledge of DJIL. Mailjet considers themselves respecting the European Data Protection Rules (GDPR of EU): https://www.mailjet.com/products/data-security-and-privacy//.
Only exception: logging in for a commentator profile (accessible under each comic) will result in a session cookie being placed on the visitor’s computer. For a commentator profile, only the name and email address are requested. These are stored exclusively in infrastructure rented by the scenarist Christian A Vogl in datacenters in the EU, including backups. A transfer to third parties does not take place at any time, especially not to persons outside the EU. DJIL recommends to log out after placing a comment: by logging out the previously stored cookie will be anonymized, thereby forbidding further tracking of a user’s click activities on DJIL.de.
It is possible to anonymously leave comments. So practically none of the functionality on DJIL.de requires the acceptance of cookie storage.
Our provider’s log files
Log files are kept for only four weeks and are only inspected for debugging. Debugging is required on the server side exclusively for the comment module – hopefully never, but who knows. Visitors who do not log in to a commentator’s profile, won’t be „debugged“.
The IP addresses of the visitors are shortened by the last digit, so that no tracing back to the person or the individual connection of the visitor is possible.
Social Media platforms
We do not integrate libraries from social media platforms. Links to these are not tracked.
Archiving e-mail
Visitors are requested not to send digital or paper mail to the operators.
However, digital or paper mail sent to the operators will be archived in individual cases, usually silently deleted or made illegible and sent for local waste recycling.
Information about any digital or paper-based messages archived in the local IT infrastructure of the operators will be provided upon digital or paper-based request. The provisions of sentence 1 of this section apply to these requests.