Cookie Policy
Last updated: 3 junio 2026
This Cookie Policy explains how box bet in Horse Racing («Permline», «we», «us») uses cookies and similar technologies, what each category does, how long they last, and how you can control them. It supplements our Privacy Policy and should be read alongside it. The terms used here have the meaning given to them in the Privacy and Electronic Communications Regulations (PECR) and the UK General Data Protection Regulation (UK GDPR).
What a cookie is
A cookie is a small text file that a website asks your browser to store on the device you are reading from. The next time you return, your browser sends the cookie back to the website, which lets the site recognise your session, remember a preference such as a consent choice, or count an aggregate visit. Cookies cannot read other files on your device, they cannot install software, and they cannot capture passwords typed into other websites.
Beyond cookies in the strict sense, there are similar technologies — for example, the browser’s local storage and session storage, and tracking pixels embedded in images. Where this policy refers to «cookies», the same rules apply to those equivalent technologies.
Our approach
We set the minimum number of cookies required to deliver the website and to understand which articles are useful to readers. We do not set advertising cookies. We do not set remarketing cookies. We do not share cookie identifiers with third-party advertisers. Strictly necessary cookies are loaded automatically because the site cannot function without them and PECR does not require consent for that category. Every other cookie is loaded only after you have given consent through the consent banner.
Categories of cookies
Strictly necessary
Strictly necessary cookies are required to deliver the website and to remember your cookie-consent choice. They include a session identifier used by our hosting platform to serve pages efficiently, a security cookie used by our content delivery network to mitigate denial-of-service attacks, and a consent cookie that records whether you have accepted or declined the optional categories. These cookies do not track you across other websites. They typically expire at the end of your browser session, or after twelve months in the case of the consent cookie, so that the consent banner does not reappear on every visit.
Analytics
Analytics cookies allow us to count visits, measure how long readers spend on each article and understand which pieces of content are most useful. They are loaded only after you have accepted analytics through the consent banner. The data they collect is aggregated and pseudonymised — we do not see your name, your contact details or your individual reading history. Analytics cookies are typically set with an expiry between one day and twenty-six months. You can decline analytics at any time and the relevant cookies will not be loaded; if they have already been loaded, you can clear them through your browser’s cookie controls.
Functionality
Functionality cookies remember preferences you have set on the website, such as a chosen reading-comfort setting if we offer one in future. We do not currently set functionality cookies beyond what is already covered by the strictly necessary category. If we add any, this policy will be updated and your consent will be requested where required by PECR.
Advertising
We do not set advertising or remarketing cookies on this website. If a future commercial partnership requires advertising cookies, those cookies will be added to this policy, declared in the consent banner, and loaded only after explicit consent in accordance with PECR.
Third-party cookies
Embedded content from third-party providers — for example, a video player or a font-delivery network — may set its own cookies when you load a page that includes that content. We minimise third-party embedding precisely to limit cookie sprawl. Where third-party content is loaded, the third party’s own cookie policy governs the cookies it sets, and we will name the relevant provider in this policy as soon as the content is added to any page.
How long cookies last
Cookies fall into two duration categories. Session cookies are deleted automatically when you close your browser. Persistent cookies remain on your device for a defined period, ranging from twenty-four hours to twenty-six months depending on the cookie. The expiry of every cookie we set is bounded by what is necessary for the relevant purpose, and the consent cookie is the longest-lived because it spares readers from re-confirming their choice on every visit.
How to manage cookies
You can control cookies through three independent channels. The consent banner on this website allows you to accept or decline non-essential categories and to change that choice at any time using the link in the footer of every page. Your browser’s settings provide a more granular set of controls, including the ability to clear all cookies from this domain, to block third-party cookies entirely, or to delete cookies automatically when you close the browser. Privacy-enhancing browser extensions and tracking-prevention features in modern browsers can provide an additional layer of control.
Disabling strictly necessary cookies will prevent parts of the website from functioning correctly. Disabling analytics has no impact on the editorial content or your ability to read any article.
Changes to this policy
We will update this Cookie Policy if we introduce new cookies, change the duration of existing cookies, or revise our consent infrastructure. The «Last updated» date at the top of the page indicates when the current version came into effect. Material changes will be summarised at the top of the page for at least thirty days following publication and, where required by law, your fresh consent will be requested through the consent banner.
Further information
If you have any question about how Permline uses cookies that is not answered by this policy or by our Privacy Policy, please write to the editorial contact route published on our About page. The Information Commissioner’s Office publishes general guidance for UK readers about cookies and online tracking, which provides authoritative background reading on the principles applied here.