What cookies are
Cookies are small text files that a website asks your browser to store on your device. They are commonly used to remember preferences, measure how a site is used, and deliver advertising. Similar technologies — such as local storage, session storage, and pixel tags — are sometimes used for the same purposes and are covered by this policy where relevant.
Cookies used on WeekYear
WeekYear itself does not set first-party tracking cookies. The cookies you may encounter while using the site fall into the following categories:
Strictly necessary
Required for the site to function. Examples include cookies set by your browser to keep your session active and to deliver pages safely. There is no opt-out for strictly necessary cookies, because the site would not work without them.
Analytics
WeekYear uses Google Analytics 4 (measurement ID G-JLVSK2CBY1). It may set first-party cookies in the _ga family to distinguish users and sessions. The data is used in aggregate to understand how the site is used and which guides are popular. See Google's cookies overview for the technical details.
Advertising (Google AdSense)
Ads on the site are delivered through Google AdSense. Google and its advertising partners may set cookies such as __gads, __gpi, IDE, and NID to serve and measure ads, including ads personalized based on your prior visits to this site or other sites. Some of these cookies are set on the doubleclick.net domain.
For a current list of cookies that Google may set for advertising and how it uses them, see How Google uses cookies in advertising and the types of cookies used by Google.
Local browser storage
Some interactive elements (the date input on the converter and the year input on the printable planner) keep transient state in your browser only. This data is not transmitted to the server and is not used to track you.
How to control cookies
Through your browser
Most browsers let you view, manage, and delete cookies and block them by default. Look in your browser's settings under "Privacy" or "Cookies." Blocking all cookies may cause parts of the site or third-party services to behave unexpectedly.
Personalized ads
- Manage Google ad personalization at Google Ad Settings.
- Opt out of personalized advertising from many networks at aboutads.info/choices.
- For visitors in Europe, use YourOnlineChoices.
- Some browsers send a Global Privacy Control signal that participating advertisers treat as an opt-out.
Analytics
To opt out of Google Analytics across sites that use it, install the Google Analytics opt-out browser add-on.
Consent
Where local law requires consent for non-essential cookies (for example, in the European Economic Area and the United Kingdom), a consent control is presented on the site. You can change your choices at any time using that control or the opt-outs above.
Changes to this policy
New providers, new features, or changes by Google may add or remove cookies over time. This page will be updated when those changes are material, and the "Effective" date at the top will be revised.
More information
For broader privacy practices, see the Privacy Policy. Questions about cookies can be sent to [email protected].