Privacy Policy
We do not collect personal data. Conversions are computed locally in your browser. We may use Google AdSense to display ads.
Learn more about Google and advertising:
Cookies
Third-party vendors, including Google, use cookies to serve ads based on your prior visits to this and other websites. Google's use of advertising cookies enables it and its partners to serve ads based on your visit to our site and/or other sites on the Internet. You may opt out of personalized advertising by visiting the resources above.
Privacy Overview
We don’t collect personal data to run the converters—calculations happen locally in your browser. A short “Recent conversions” list may be stored in localStorage on your device for convenience.
AdSense & Cookies
We may use Google AdSense to display ads. Third‑party vendors, including Google, use cookies to serve ads based on your prior visits to this and other websites. You can manage or opt out of personalized ads using these resources:
Data We Store
- Local only: recent conversions saved in your browser (you can clear them anytime).
- Contact: if you email us, we receive your email and message contents.
Your Choices
- Clear your browser’s site data to remove local history.
- Use the Ad Settings link above to control personalized ads.
- Email us for questions: everydayroyalties@gmail.com
Advertising & Cookies (Google AdSense)
We use Google AdSense to show ads. Google may use cookies to serve personalized ads based on your visits to this and other sites. You can learn more about how Google uses information, manage your ad settings, or review Google's Privacy Policy at the links below.
California Privacy (CCPA/CPRA) — Do Not Sell/Share
California residents can opt out of the sale or sharing of personal information used for advertising. To exercise this choice, use the Manage option in our cookie banner or contact us via the email on the Contact page.
Privacy in Plain Terms
Unit Converter Hub is designed as a tool, not a profile-building engine. Even so, it uses third-party services that have their own policies.
- We do not require accounts for basic conversions.
- Recent conversions are stored locally in your browser, not on a central server.
- Analytics and ads run through providers like Google, which have separate controls you can adjust.
- You stay in charge via browser settings, consent banners, and your own device choices.
Practical Steps for More Private Browsing
- Use private or incognito windows when you don't want session details lingering.
- Regularly clear cookies or set your browser to clear them on exit if that fits your habits.
- Review which browser extensions can see your data and remove ones you no longer trust or need.
- Pair these habits with the consent options and ad settings mentioned elsewhere on this page.
Privacy Scenarios to Think Through
- Shared devices at home, school, or work where multiple people use the same browser.
- Public computers where you may want to avoid leaving any trace of your session.
- Personal devices where you're comfortable trading some data for convenience.
- High-sensitivity tasks where you might prefer extra privacy layers regardless of the site.
A Quick Privacy Checkup You Can Do Today
- Review your browser's privacy settings and raise them if they no longer match your comfort level.
- Remove old extensions you don't use that still have wide permissions.
- Sign out from shared devices when you're done using them.
- Visit your ad and account dashboards with major providers to adjust what's collected or shown.
Thinking About Privacy Over the Long Term
- Revisit settings periodically as your life circumstances, devices, or work change.
- Teach simple habits to family members or colleagues who share your devices.
- Stay informed about major changes in browser or platform privacy options.
- Adjust your comfort level if a setup that once felt fine stops feeling that way.
Talking About Privacy With Others
- Explain settings in everyday language instead of technical jargon.
- Share simple habits that have worked for you, like using separate browsers for different tasks.
- Respect different comfort levels—not everyone will choose the same balance.
- Encourage curiosity rather than fear when learning about privacy tools.