Cookie Information

The domain https://ohmylia.com (named OHMYLIA.COM) uses automatic cookie collection procedures to gather personal information, such as browser type or operating system, referring page, path, ISSP domain, etc. These help us tailor this website to your personal needs and promote a better user experience.

What Are Cookies?

A cookie is an innocuous text file stored in your browser (Chrome, Firefox, etc.) when you visit almost any website.

The utility of the cookie is for the visited website to remember your visit when you browse it again, thus facilitating navigation and being helpful. That is, as a website, it helps us improve quality, allowing us to customize the navigation of each particular user to some extent.

Although many people do not know it, cookies have been used for decades. Moreover, they are currently essential for the operation of the Internet, providing countless advantages in the provision of interactive services and facilitating navigation.

Remember that cookies cannot damage your computer, and, in return, having them enabled helps the website owner identify and resolve errors, thus improving navigability and providing a better experience for website users.

What Is Not a Cookie?

It is not a virus, nor a Trojan, nor a worm, nor spam, nor spyware, nor does it open pop-up windows.

What Information Does a Cookie Store?

Cookies usually do not store sensitive information about you, such as credit card or banking data, photographs, your ID card, or personal information.

The data they store are technical in nature, personal preferences, content personalization, etc. For example, the language you browse in or the font size.

The web server does not associate you with the person you are, but with your web browser. In fact, if, for example, you usually browse with Firefox and try to browse the same website with other browsers, such as Microsoft Edge or Chrome, you will see that the website does not realize that you are the same person because it is actually associating you with the browser.

What Types of Cookies Exist?

Cookies, depending on how long they remain installed, can be divided into session cookies or permanent cookies. The former expire when the user closes the browser. The latter expire when the purpose for which they serve is fulfilled or when they are manually deleted.

Also, depending on their purpose, cookies can be classified as follows:

    Required or Technical Cookies: These are strictly necessary and essential for the proper functioning of the website. They are usually generated when the user accesses the website or logs in. They allow, among other things, to know when a human is browsing or an automated application, when an anonymous user or a registered one is browsing, basic tasks for the operation of any dynamic website. Also, they keep the user identified, so if they leave the website and come back later, the browser or device will still identify them, thus facilitating their navigation without having to identify themselves again. Similarly, these cookies also serve to check if the user is authorized to access certain services or areas of the website.

    Preference Cookies: They allow recording all the information related to how the website behaves or looks, such as the language used or the region from which it is accessed.

    Statistical/Analytical Cookies: They are used to analyze and improve the browsing experience, optimize the operation of the website, and see how visitors interact. They collect information about the type of browsing you are doing, the sections you use the most, consulted products, usual time zone, language, etc.

    Marketing Cookies: These cookies serve so that, in the spaces of the websites, videos, or social networks reserved for advertising, ads that may be of interest to you appear, and not any random ad. This potential interest is deduced based on your browsing preferences, your country of origin, or language. They are also those cookies that collect information about the ads shown to users of the website.

    Geolocation Cookies: These cookies are used to locate in which country or region the user accessing a service of the website is, so that it can offer contents or services appropriate to their location.

What Are First-Party and Third-Party Cookies?

First-party cookies are those generated by the page you are visiting, and third-party cookies are those generated by external services or providers, such as Facebook, Twitter, or Google.

What Happens If I Disable Cookies?

To understand the extent to which disabling cookies can have an impact, some examples are shown:

    You will not be able to share content from that website on Facebook, Twitter, or any other social network.

    The website will not be able to adapt the content to your personal preferences, as is often the case in online stores.

    You will not be able to access the personal area of that website, such as My Account, or My Profile or My Orders.

    Online stores: You will not be able to make digital purchases. They will have to be by phone or by visiting the physical store, if it has one.

    You will not be able to customize your geographical preferences such as time zone, currency, or language.

    The website will not be able to carry out web analytics on visitors and traffic on the website, making it difficult for the website to be competitive.

    You will not be able to write in the blog, upload photos, post comments, rate or rate content. The website will also not be able to tell if you are a human or an automated application that posts spam.

    Personalized or sectoral advertising cannot be displayed, reducing the advertising revenue of the website.

    All social networks use cookies. If you disable them, you will not be able to use any social network.

Can Cookies Be Deleted?

The answer is, yes. And not only delete, also block, generally or particularly for a specific domain.

To delete cookies from a specific website, you must go to your browser's settings and there you can search for those associated with that domain and delete their cookies.

Disabling or Deleting Cookies

The answer is, yes. And not only delete, also block, generally or particularly for a specific domain.

To delete cookies from a specific website, you must go to your browser's settings and there you can search for those associated with that domain and delete their cookies.

Cookie Configuration and Management

For more information on the personalized configuration of cookies or to access options for activation, restriction, and/or disabling, you can consult the help section of your browser, to learn more:

Google Chrome

Mozilla Firefox

Apple Safari

Microsoft Edge

Internet Explorer

Policy and Cookie Information Update

The owner of this website may modify this Cookie Policy according to legislative or regulatory requirements, or to adapt this policy to instructions given.