Legal

Cookie Notice

What cookies we use, why we use them, and how to control them. Written in plain English, for UK visitors.

Last updated: June 2026

1. What are cookies?

Cookies are small text files saved on your device when you visit a website. They help sites remember information about your visit, like preferences or whether you've seen a notice before.

2. The cookies we use

We keep our cookie use deliberately small. This site uses strictly necessary cookies only — no advertising, no cross-site tracking, no third-party trackers without your explicit consent.

Strictly necessary

  • ellexor.cookie.consent — remembers your choice from our cookie banner. Stored in your browser's localStorage; persists until you clear it.

Optional (only if you accept)

If we add anonymous analytics in the future, we'll only load them after you've given consent through the banner. We use privacy-respecting tools such as Plausible or Fathom where possible — both are cookie-less by default.

3. Your choices

When you first visit, the cookie banner gives you two options: Accept or Reject non-essential. You can change your mind at any time by clearing your browser's site data for ellexor.com — the banner will reappear on your next visit and you can re-choose.

4. Browser controls

You can block or delete cookies through your browser settings. Most modern browsers let you:

  • See which cookies a site has set.
  • Block third-party cookies, all cookies, or cookies from specific sites.
  • Delete cookies on demand.

Helpful guides:

5. Third-party content

If we embed third-party content (e.g. a YouTube video or a Google Map), that provider may set their own cookies once you interact with it. We try to avoid embedding third-party content where possible, and we'll always tell you what's loading.

6. Changes

We'll update this notice if we change what cookies we use. Material changes will be flagged on this page with a new "Last updated" date.

7. Contact

Questions? Email [email protected]. To learn more about cookies and your rights under UK GDPR, see the ICO's guidance.