Cookie Policy and Data Protection Policy

Cookie Policy

This Cookie Policy is issued on behalf of Thinkroom(UK) Limited, a company incorporated in England & Wales and having company number 15674704 and its registered office at 15 Cascade Court, 1 Aopwith Way, London, SW11 8NS.(“Thinkroom”), namely, https://www.thinkroom.co.uk/ (“Website”).

(“Thinkroom UK”, “we”, “us” or “our”). If you are a resident of the UK or an European Economic Area (“EEA”) country, Thinkroom UK is the controller and responsible for any personal data they collect regarding UK or EEA residents, and any transfer outside the UK or EEA is subject to our compliance with our obligations under applicable data protection law (including the UK General Data Protection Regulation and EU General Data Protection Regulation) in ensuring adequate safeguards in relation to such transfer. As We use cookies and similar tools on our website, to improve their performance and enhance your user experience. This policy explains how we do that. We do update this Policy from time to time so please do return and review this Policy regularly. This version was last updated on 5 April 2024.

What are Cookies?

Cookies are small text files which a website may put on your computer or mobile device when you first visit a site or page. The cookie will help the website, or another website, to recognise your device the next time you visit. We use the term “cookies” in this policy to refer to all files that collect information in this way (including pixels summarised below).

There are many functions cookies serve. For example, they can help us to remember your username and preferences, analyse how well the website is performing, or even allow us to recommend content we believe will be most relevant to you.

Certain cookies contain personal information – for example, if you click to “remember me” when logging in, a cookie will store your user identifier. Most cookies will not collect information that identifies you, but will instead collect more general information such as how users arrive at and use the website.

What is a pixel?

Tracking pixels are transparent graphic images (sometimes called web beacons or tracking beacons) that are placed on certain pages of our website. A tracking pixel collects certain electronic information from your webpage’s header, such as your IP address or browser and your location, which may be forwarded to an advertising platform for the purpose of providing advertising to you that is based on your personal interests. We also use tracking pixels provided by certain tools to allow us to see how you interact with our email marketing or website e.g. to determine whether a recipient opened the email or accessed a certain link.

More information about pixels/web beacons is available at http://www.webopedia.com/TERM/W/Web_beacon.html

The Cookies we use

At the date of the last update of this Cookie Policy, the list below represents a comprehensive list of all cookies set on the website, but please note that the cookies we use are subject to fairly frequent change. The purposes of the cookies in use, as described below will not change without this policy being updated. However we may not update this policy every time the identity of a particular cookie or the party setting the cookie changes.

Thinkroom UK may use the following categories of cookies:

Strictly necessary

These are cookies that are required for the operation of our websites or provide services explicitly requested by you. They include, for example, cookies that enable you to log into secure areas of our websites or apps.

Analytical / Performance

They allow us to recognise and count the number of visitors and to see how visitors move around our websites when they are using it. This can help us improve the service or create and analyse content tests to allow us to optimise the experience for future users.

Functionality

These are used to recognise you when you return to our website. This enables us to personalise our content for you and remember your preferences (for example, your choice of language or region).

Targeting cookies/tracking pixels

These record your visit to our website, the pages you have visited and the links you have followed. We will use this information to make our website and the advertising displayed to you more relevant to your interests. We may also share this information with third parties for this purpose.

We may combine the information we collect through cookies and pixel tags with other information we have collected from you, based on our legitimate interest, as this information may be used to improve our website,  personalize your online experience, tailor our communications with you, determine the effectiveness of our advertising, and for other internal business purposes.

Please note that third parties (including, for example, advertising networks and providers of external services like web traffic analysis services) may also use cookies, over which we have no control. These cookies are likely to be analytical/performance cookies or targeting cookies.

Consent to use of our Cookies

The law allows us to store cookies on your computer if they are essential to the operation of our website. We need your consent to set non-essential cookies on your computer.

When you use our website for the first time we give you the opportunity to accept or decline cookies.

If you wish to withdraw consent for any reason, please contact us.

Declining Cookies

Some of the cookies we use are essential if the website is to operate properly. If you decline them, some of the features of the website may not work as well as we intend and you may not be to access or use some features.

Unless you have set your browser so that it will decline cookies, our system will set some cookies as soon you use the website.

You block cookies by activating the setting on your browser that allows you to refuse the setting of all or some cookies. For information about this you should look in your browser’s ‘help’ facility. However, if you use your browser settings to block all cookies (including essential cookies) you may not be able to access all or parts of our website.

The links below show you how to disable cookies in some common browsers:

If you have previously used the website and no longer wish to accept cookies, you should be aware that some cookies will have been set. You may delete these cookies at any time by following the instructions at: https://www.aboutcookies.org/how-to-delete-cookies/

More information on cookies can be found on allaboutcookies.org. In addition, the Digital Advertising Alliance (DAA) also provides a website that allows you to opt-out of cookies (and/or pixels) for various participating companies at www.optout.aboutads.info. The Network Advertising Initiative also provides an opt-out page at http://optout.networkadvertising.org/?c=1.

The following are some third-party partners currently being used on our website and services. For our third-party partners, if you’d like to better understand their policies and how to manage their cookies directly you can access the provided link next to each partner.

  • Facebook – user data policy: https://www.facebook.com/about/privacy/your-info-on-other
  • Google AdSense – advertising solution for display ads: https://www.google.com/intl/en_us/policies/privacy/ and you can opt-out at https://adssettings.google.com/authenticated?hl=en
  • Google Affiliate Partners – advertising solution for search based ads: https://www.google.com/intl/en_us/policies/privacy/ and you can opt-out at https://adssettings.google.com/authenticated?hl=en
  • Google Analytics – analytics tool used to measure site traffic and other site performance metrics: https://tools.google.com/dlpage/gaoptout
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • TikTok

Duration of Cookies

  • Session cookies – These cookies are temporary and expire once you close your browser (or once your session ends).
  • Persistent cookies — This category encompasses all cookies that remain until you erase them or your browser does, depending on the cookie’s expiration date. All persistent cookies have an expiration date written into their code, but their duration can vary for each category or specific cookie. If you require more information regarding the duration of a particular cookie used by Thinkroom UK please contact us on the email below.

Thinkroom UK's Data Protection Policy

  1. POLICY STATEMENT

1.1            Everyone has rights with regard to the way in which their personal data in handled. During the course of our activities we will collect, store and process personal data about suppliers, customers, staff and other third parties, and we recognise that the correct and lawful treatment of this data will maintain confidence in the organisation and will provide for successful business operations.

1.2            Data users are obliged to comply with this policy when processing personal data on our behalf. Any breach of this policy may result in disciplinary action.

  1. ABOUT THIS POLICY

2.1            The types of personal data that Thinkroom(UK) Limited, a company incorporated in England & Wales and having company number  15674704 and its registered office at 15 Cascade Court, 1 Sopwith Way, London, SW11 8NS (“we”, “us”, “our”, “Thinkroom UK”) may be required to handle include information about current, past and prospective suppliers, customers, staff, and other third parties that we communicate with. The personal data, which may be held on paper or on a computer or other media, is subject to certain legal safeguards specified in applicable data protection laws and other regulations, including GDPR.

2.2            This policy and any other documents referred to in it sets out the basis on which we will process any personal data we collect from data subjects, or that is provided to us by data subjects or other sources.

2.3            This policy does not form part of any employee’s contract of employment and may be amended at any time.

2.4            This policy has been approved by our board and sets out rules on data protection and the legal conditions that must be satisfied when we obtain, handle, process, transfer and store personal data.

2.5            Thinkroom UK is responsible for ensuring compliance with the applicable data protection laws and with this policy. Any questions about the operation of this policy or any concerns that the policy has not been followed should be referred in the first instance to amy@thinkroom.co.uk

  1. DEFINITION OF DATA PROTECTION TERMS

3.1            Data is information which is stored electronically, on a computer, or in certain paper-based filing systems.

3.2            Data subjects for the purpose of this policy include all living individuals about whom we holds personal data, where applicable law applies. Data subjects have legal rights in relation to their personal information.

3.3            Personal data means data relating to a living individual who can be identified from that data (or from that data and other information in our possession). Personal data can be factual (for example, a name, address or date of birth) or it can be an opinion about that person, their actions and behaviour.

3.4            Data controllers are the people who or organisations which determine the purposes for which, and the manner in which, any personal data is processed. They are responsible for establishing practices and policies in line with GDPR. We are the data controller of all personal data used in our business for our own commercial purposes.

3.5            Data users are those of our employees and contractors whose work involves processing personal data. Data users must protect the data they handle in accordance with this data protection policy and any applicable data security procedures at all times.

3.6            Data processors include any person or organisation that is not a data user that processes personal data on our behalf and on our instructions. Employees of data controllers are excluded from this definition but it could include suppliers which handle personal data on Thinkroom UK’s behalf. Thinkroom UK could also be deemed a data processor with respect to use of the Thinkroom UK platform by our members, as we may process personal data of others (including respondents) on behalf of third parties in accordance with their instructions.

 

3.7            Processing is any activity that involves use of the data. It includes obtaining, recording or holding the data, or carrying out any operation or set of operations on the data including organising, amending, retrieving, using, disclosing, erasing or destroying it. Processing also includes transferring personal data to third parties.

3.8            Sensitive personal data includes information about a person’s racial or ethnic origin, political opinions, religious or similar beliefs, trade union membership, physical or mental health or condition or sexual life, or about the commission of, or proceedings for, any offence committed or alleged to have been committed by that person, the disposal of such proceedings or the sentence of any court in such proceedings. Sensitive personal data can only be processed under strict conditions, including a condition requiring the express permission of the person concerned.

  1. DATA PROTECTION PRINCIPLES

4.1            Anyone processing personal data must comply with the eight enforceable principles of good practice. These provide that personal data must be:

(a)  Processed fairly and lawfully.

(b)  Processed for limited purposes and in an appropriate way.

(c)  Adequate, relevant and not excessive for the purpose.

(d)  Accurate.

(e)  Not kept longer than necessary for the purpose.

(f)  Processed in line with data subjects’ rights.

(g)  Secure.

(h)  Not transferred to people or organisations situated in countries without adequate protection.

  1. FAIR AND LAWFUL PROCESSING

5.1            This policy and applicable law is not intended to prevent the processing of personal data, but to ensure that it is done fairly and without adversely affecting the rights of the data subject.

5.2            For personal data to be processed lawfully, they must be processed on the basis of one of the legal grounds set out in applicable law, including GDPR. These include, among other things, the data subject’s consent to the processing, or that the processing is necessary for the performance of a contract with the data subject, for the compliance with a legal obligation to which the data controller is subject, or for the legitimate interest of the data controller or the party to whom the data is disclosed. When sensitive personal data is being processed, additional conditions must be met. When processing personal data as data controllers in the course of our business, we will ensure that those requirements are met.

  1. PROCESSING FOR LIMITED PURPOSES

6.1            In the course of our business, we may collect and process the personal data set out in the Schedule 1. This may include data we receive directly from a data subject (for example, by completing forms or by corresponding with us by mail, phone, email or otherwise) and data we receive from other sources (including, for example, customers, suppliers, business partners, sub-contractors in technical, payment and delivery services, payroll services, credit reference agencies and others).

    6.2       We will only process personal data for the specific purposes set out in the Schedule 1 or for any other purposes specifically permitted by applicable law, including GDPR. We will notify those purposes to the data subject when we first collect the data or as soon as possible thereafter.

  1. NOTIFYING DATA SUBJECTS

7.1             If we collect personal data directly from data subjects, we will inform them about:

(a)  The purpose or purposes for which we intend to process that personal data.

(b)  The types of third parties, if any, with which we will share or to which we will disclose that personal data.

(c)  The means, if any, with which data subjects can limit our use and disclosure of their personal data.

7.2             If we receive personal data about a data subject from other sources, we will provide the data subject with this information as soon as possible thereafter, unless it has already been provided.

7.3            We will also inform data subjects whose personal data we process that we are the data controller with regard to that data.

  1. ADEQUATE, RELEVANT AND NON-EXCESSIVE PROCESSING

8.1            We will only collect personal data to the extent that it is required for the specific purpose notified to the data subject.

  1. ACCURATE DATA

9.1            We will ensure that personal data we hold is accurate and kept up to date. We will check the accuracy of any personal data at the point of collection and at regular intervals afterwards. We will take all reasonable steps to destroy or amend inaccurate or out-of-date data.

  1. TIMELY PROCESSING

10.1         We will not keep personal data longer than is necessary for the purpose or purposes for which they were collected. We will take all reasonable steps to destroy, or erase from our systems, all data which is no longer required, in accordance with our Data Retention Policy.

  1. PROCESSING IN LINE WITH DATA SUBJECT’S RIGHTS

11.1         We will process all personal data in line with data subjects’ rights, in particular their right to:

(a)  Request access to any data held about them by a data controller (see also Clause 15.).

(b)  Prevent the processing of their data for direct-marketing purposes.

(c)  Ask to have inaccurate data amended (see also Clause 9.).

(d)  Prevent processing that is likely to cause damage or distress to themselves or anyone else.

  1. DATA SECURITY

12.1         We will process all personal data we hold in accordance with IT security best practice or our applicable IT Security Policy and take appropriate security measures against unlawful or unauthorised processing of personal data, and against the accidental loss of, or damage to, personal data.

12.2         We will put in place procedures and technologies to maintain the security of all personal data from the point of collection to the point of destruction. Personal data will only be transferred to a data processor if they agree to comply with those procedures and policies, or if they put in place adequate measures themselves.

12.3         We will maintain data security by protecting the confidentiality, integrity and availability of the personal data, defined as follows:

(a)  Confidentiality means that only people who are authorised to use the data can access it.

(b)  Integrity means that personal data should be accurate and suitable for the purpose for which it is processed.

(c)  Availability means that authorised users should be able to access the data if they need it for authorised purposes.

12.4         Security procedures include:

(a)  Entry controls. Any stranger seen in entry-controlled areas should be reported;

(b)  Secure lockable desks and cupboards. Desks and cupboards should be kept locked if they hold confidential information of any kind. (Personal information is always considered confidential);

(c)  Methods of disposal. Paper documents should be shredded. Digital storage devices should be physically destroyed or securely erased when they are no longer required;

(d)  Equipment. Data users must ensure that individual monitors do not show confidential information to passers-by and that they password protect their devices when left unattended;

(e) Information Security Policy. Other security procedures are set out in our IT Security Policy.

  1. TRANSFERRING PERSONAL DATA TO A COUNTRY OUTSIDE THE EEA

 13.1        We may transfer any personal data we hold to a country outside the European Economic Area (”EEA”), provided that one of the following conditions applies:

(a)  The country to which the personal data are transferred ensures an adequate level of protection for the data subjects’ rights and freedoms.

(b)  The data subject has given his consent.

(c)  The transfer is necessary for one of the reasons set out in the Act, including the performance of a contract between us and the data subject, or to protect the vital interests of the data subject.

(d)  The transfer is legally required on important public interest grounds or for the establishment, exercise or defence of legal claims.

(e)  The transfer is authorised by the relevant data protection authority where we have adduced adequate safeguards with respect to the protection of the data subjects’ privacy, their fundamental rights and freedoms, and the exercise of their rights.

13.2         Subject to the requirements in Clause 12.1 above, personal data we hold may also be processed by staff operating outside the EEA who work for us or for one of our suppliers. That staff maybe engaged in, among other things, the fulfilment of contracts with the data subject, the processing of payment details and the provision of support services.

  1. DISCLOSURE AND SHARING OF PERSONAL INFORMATION

14.1         We may share personal data we hold with any member of our group, which means our authorised agents, and their subsidiaries, our ultimate holding company and its subsidiaries.

14.2         We may also disclose personal data we hold to third parties:

(a)  In the event that we sell or buy any business or assets, in which case we may disclose personal data we hold to the prospective seller or buyer of such business or assets.

(b)  If we or substantially all of our assets are acquired by a third party, in which case personal data we hold will be one of the transferred assets.

14.3          If we are under a duty to disclose or share a data subject’s personal data in order to comply with any legal obligation, or in order to enforce or apply any contract with the data subject or other agreements; or to protect our rights, property, or safety of our employees, customers, or others. This includes exchanging information with other companies and organisations for the purposes of fraud protection and credit risk reduction.

14.4         We may also share personal data we hold with selected third parties for the purposes set out in the Schedule 1.

  1. DEALING WITH SUBJECT ACCESS REQUESTS

15.1         Data subjects must make a formal request for information we hold about them. This must be made in writing. Staff who receive a written request should forward it to management.

15.2         When receiving telephone enquiries, we will only disclose personal data we hold on our systems if the following conditions are met:

(a)  We will check the caller’s identity to make sure that information is only given to a person who is entitled to it.

(b)  We will suggest that the caller put their request in writing if we are not sure about the caller’s identity and where their identity cannot be checked.

15.3         Our staff will refer a request to Thinkroom UK legal providers for assistance in difficult situations. Staff should not be bullied into disclosing personal information.

  1.  CHANGES TO THIS POLICY

16.1         We reserve the right to change this policy at any time. Where appropriate, we will notify data subjects of those changes by mail or email.

The Schedule - Data Protection Policy

Contacting us

Should you have any questions, inquiries, or concerns about our use of cookies or our data protection policy, please contact us at amy@thinkroom.co.uk

Updated 28 June 2022