Totobe only collects anonymous data that Totobe and owners of content on websites provided by Totobe have access to. No data collected by Totobe is sold or shared with others by Totobe or customers with their own domain. All data and services are stored in Norway and managed by Totobe.
Collected data is used to keep track of the number of visitors and from which part of the country in which country the visitors come from. And to optimize the services.
The ethical tissue analysis tool Matomo is used for this purpose. If you want to know more about what Matomo is for, you can read on their website.
For applications provided by Totobe that are connected or shared via Facebook, Google or other providers that collect data, Totobe disclaims all responsibility.
Totobe gives no guarantee for software supplied by others and disclaims all responsibility in any way for incorrect information or errors in relation to software or hardware.
Totobe always works to give the customer the best solution based on available knowledge at the time the work is carried out.
Cookies are used to collect this information.
A cookie is a code that is sent from our server to the browser on your PC when you are on the home page. This code is stored in the browser. When you later access the homepage, the cookie will be sent from your browser to our server, which will "know" your PC. This makes it possible for the server to adapt the services to you, the user. If you have, for example, set it for high-contrast rendering once, the server will complain that you neglected to make that setting again.
Cookies are used for personalisation, login, language management and for statistics used to improve the websites.
The Electronic Communications Act (Ekomlova) came into force on 1 July 2013. The Act regulates conditions for the storage of information in communication equipment - the so-called "cookie clause" (Ekomlova §2-7b).
Most web browsers are set to automatically accept cookies. If you do not wish to use them, you can change the settings in your browser so that cookies are not saved automatically. You can decide whether everyone should be blocked, or whether you should have the opportunity to choose whether they should be accepted or not. By not accepting cookies, you avoid your PC being "recognized" on the page you visit. But at the same time, you have to expect to miss out on some of the functions that the site otherwise offers.