PCFA.ORG makes absolutely NO GUARANTEES of privacy
when you visit our server.
We collect every piece of data about you and your
computer that software can find.
You should assume that any and information collected by the PCFA.ORG server
is publicly available.
If you have any specific questions, please address them to
admin@pcfa.org. If you have any complaints or
do not agree with the information collected, please leave.
When you visit any web page, our Apache httpd server logs
- the date and time of your visit;
- the IP number or the computer and domain name;
- the name and length of any file sent to you;
- the name of any file you requested but was not sent to you
(for example, the file does not exist);
- the name and version of the web browser you are using;
and
- the name set for your computer.
Forms may and do request other information, such as
your name, address, city, etc., and those items of
information are often stored in databases,
transmitted via e-mail to PCFA.ORG's administrator, or
by whatever means a user has set in their pages.
PCFA does not use "cookies" in our web pages, but some
of the users may use them in their pages.
When you visit an FTP directory, our wu-ftpd server logs
- the date and time of your visit;
- the IP number or the computer and domain name;
- the account name you used to login;
- the name and length of any file sent to you or sent by you;
- the name of any file you requested but was not sent to you
(for example, the file does not exist), or the name of
any file you attempted to send, but were unsuccessful in
sending.
When you use the mail server, our sendmail, pop, and imap daemons log
- the date and time of the message;
- whether you were sending the message or being sent the message;
- the IP number or the computer and domain name accessing
the server, and other information contained in the Internet
headers of the message;
- the account name you used to login;
- the port numbers used to gain access to PCFA.ORG;
- the name and length of message sent to you or sent by you;
- indicator of success or failure in sending or receiving messages;
and
- the complete message if it was trapped as unsolicited
bulk mail or as possibly containing a virus.
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