Privacy Policy
Last updated: April 2026
The short version
We don't track you. We don't sell your data. We won't know who you are without your consent.
What we collect (and why)
When you visit this site, our web server generates basic access logs — things like your IP address, the page you requested, and your browser type. This is standard plumbing that keeps the lights on. We use these logs only to diagnose technical problems and understand rough traffic patterns (e.g., "a few hundred people visited this week"). We don't link them to any identity, and we don't hold onto them any longer than necessary.
That's it. No cookies tracking your browsing history. No fingerprinting. No pixels phoning home to ad networks. No "analytics" suite watching your every scroll and click.
What we don't do
- We don't use third-party advertising or tracking services.
- We don't sell, share, or trade any information about visitors — ever.
- We don't build profiles on users.
- We don't use social login buttons that let platforms follow you around the web.
If you contact us
If you email us or reach out through a contact form, we'll use what you share to reply to you. We won't add you to mailing lists, share your message with others, or archive your details beyond what the conversation requires.
Third-party services
We aim to host our own infrastructure wherever possible. If we ever embed content from a third party (a video, a map, a font), we'll note it here. Right now: none.
A word on why this matters
We study power, culture, and technology. We think surveillance capitalism is one of the defining harms of the modern internet. It would be pretty embarrassing to run a site like ours while quietly feeding your browsing habits to a data broker. We won't.
Changes to this policy
If we ever change how we handle data in a meaningful way, we'll update this page and note the date at the top. We won't bury it.