This Cookie Policy explains how Briliante uses cookies and similar technologies on justbriliante.com. It works alongside our Privacy Policy.
1. What are cookies?
Cookies are small text files placed on your device when you visit a website. They let the site remember information about your visit — your language preference, whether you've been here before, what pages you viewed. Similar technologies (local storage, pixels) do much the same thing. Throughout this policy "cookies" covers all of them.
2. Cookies we use
Strictly necessary
Required for the site to work. You can't turn these off in a sensible way.
- Session cookies — keep you signed in to the admin area or partner portal during a session.
- CSRF tokens — protect forms from cross-site request forgery.
- reCAPTCHA — Google reCAPTCHA v3 runs on form pages to detect bots. It loads a small script from google.com and may set cookies in google.com's domain. See Google's privacy policy.
Preference
- briliante_lang — remembers the language you selected (EN, ZH, IT, FR, AR). Stored in your browser's local storage, not a cookie, but serves the same purpose.
Analytics
- Google Analytics (_ga, _ga_*) — help us understand how visitors use the site: which pages they view, where they arrive from, roughly where in the world they are. Data is aggregated and pseudonymised. We do not combine it with any identifying data from forms you submit. See how Google uses data from sites that use their services.
- Meta Pixel (_fbp) — if present, measures effectiveness of any Meta/Facebook ads we may run and helps us reach similar audiences. Does not store contact info from forms.
3. Third-party cookies
Some cookies on the site are set by third parties we rely on — primarily Google (Analytics, reCAPTCHA, Fonts) and Meta (Pixel). These parties operate under their own privacy policies. We do not control and are not responsible for their cookies, but we've chosen each provider because they are widely used and subject to privacy regulation.
4. How long cookies stay
- Session cookies are deleted when you close your browser.
- Persistent cookies (like Google Analytics) remain for a fixed period, typically up to 2 years, unless you delete them sooner.
5. How to manage cookies
You can control cookies through your browser settings. Most browsers let you block cookies, delete existing cookies, or get a prompt before one is set. Where to find the setting:
You can also opt out of Google Analytics specifically at tools.google.com/dlpage/gaoptout.
Blocking strictly necessary cookies will break parts of the site. Blocking analytics cookies will not affect anything you see — we just won't be able to see that you visited.
6. Do Not Track
Some browsers send a "Do Not Track" signal. There is no industry consensus on how to respond to it, so we currently treat it the same as an explicit opt-out for our analytics cookies where technically possible.
7. Changes to this policy
We'll update this page if we add, remove, or change cookies significantly. The "Last updated" date at the top reflects the most recent revision.