What cookies are
A "cookie" is a small piece of data a website saves on your device to remember information between visits — like the contents of your cart or whether you're signed in. We use them, and so do most of the services we work with. This policy explains which ones, why, and how to control them.
What we use cookies for
| Category | Why we use them | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Strictly necessary | Make the site work — sign-in, cart, account, checkout | Session, CSRF, account auth |
| Functional | Remember your preferences and improve the experience | Saved calculator presets, theme, language |
| Analytics | Understand which pages and features are used (aggregated, de-identified) | Page-view counts, performance metrics |
| Marketing | Used sparingly — measure the effectiveness of our own marketing | Conversion measurement, attribution |
Your control
You can refuse or remove cookies at any time:
- From our site — use the cookie preferences button at the bottom of any page
- In your browser — most browsers let you block cookies, delete them, or be notified before they're set
- Opt-out signals — we honor Global Privacy Control (GPC) signals where required by law
Blocking strictly-necessary cookies may break sign-in, cart, and checkout.
Third-party cookies
A small number of trusted service providers — for example, our payment processor and our analytics provider — may set their own cookies when you visit Solvé. Each is contractually bound to use those cookies only for the purpose we engage them for, in line with our Privacy Policy.
Do Not Track
We don't track you across other websites for advertising purposes. We honor browser DNT and GPC signals.
Changes
If we add new cookie categories or services, we'll update this page and bump the effective date. Questions: privacy@solve.science.
Questions about this policy? Email legal@solve.science. Mail: Solvé Sciences, LLC, Austin, TX, United States.
This document is provided in plain English to support clarity. It is not a substitute for legal advice. Solvé recommends having questions reviewed by qualified counsel.