FixForwarding:Privacy policy
Personally identifiable data is submitted to this site according to the European directives on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data. In that respect, data is processed locally on a secured server and will not be made available to third parties except in case of i) explicit request of the data subject, or ii) compulsory request from law enforcement.
The controller as well as the responsible for the data processing is the webmasterfixforwarding.org, who can be identified via the public whois database and can be contacted at the given email address.
Visitors
Simply visiting the web site does not expose your identity publicly. However, regular access logs remain on the server for the prescribed amount of time. The logs may contain the IP address you used, your browser's name, version, language setting, and possibly the referral URL.
Authors
When you edit any page in the wiki, you are publishing a document. This is a public act, and you are identified publicly with that edit as its author. Any content that you contribute will be made available under the GNU Free Documentation License (see FixForwarding:Copyrights).
You are required to log in before you can publish in the wiki.
If you are logged in, you will be identified by your user name. This may be your real name if you so choose, or you may choose to publish under a pseudonym, whatever user name you selected when you created your account.
Account creation currently requires a confirmed email address. It is not published nor disclosed except as mentioned above.
Topics
This site is devoted to the standardization of email forwarding. As email is a basic mean of human communication, almost any topic may possibly fit into the discussion. In particular, non-technical arguments pertinent to communication in general are welcome. However, this is not a generic blog nor an encyclopedia, and a precise relevance is required.
Non-pertinent contributions will be deleted. In addition, the webmaster reserves the right to eradicate from the site any morally offensive or otherwise illegal material, as well as the account(s) where it originated from.