Privacy

This website is hosted by Squarespace, a company headquartered in New York City. 

Like most websites, Squarespace automatically logs basic technical information when you visit. This includes your IP address, the browser and device you’re using, your operating system, which pages you visit, when you visit them, and whatever site linked you to this one.

This information lets me know how many people visited my website, which sites directed them here, and which pages they viewed.

Squarespace presents this data to me in anonymized, aggregated form. I can’t identify you personally. I don’t try to do so.

My website uses essential cookies to maintain basic functionality. These aren’t used to track you, and they disappear from your device when you close your browser. Non-essential cookies — the kind that stick around to monitor your browsing behavior — have been disabled.

If you enter your name and email address using the form on the contact page and hit “send,” you will — as common sense suggests — be giving me your name and email address.

Doing so prompts Squarespace to send this information to my Gmail inbox. Squarespace also stores a copy of this information in my account’s Contacts panel.

I don’t share this information with anyone. I use it only to respond to you.

For scheduling sessions, I use Calendly a software company based in Georgia (the state, not the country). I’ve embedded a Calendly widget on my site. I’ve disabled all but their strictly necessary cookies, which are required to make scheduling and payment work properly.

If you schedule a session through Calendly, they will process the information you enter and share it with me so I can confirm the appointment. I don’t share this information with anyone, and I use it only for scheduling.

For payments, I use Stripe, a company headquartered in South San Francisco, California, and Dublin, Ireland.

If you purchase a session, Stripe will process your payment information (like your credit card details) on my behalf. I don’t see or store this information. I just get notified that the payment went through. Stripe may use functional cookies to make these payments work properly.

You have the right to access, correct, or delete your personal information, and to withdraw consent at any time.

Not every jurisdiction acknowledges these rights, but the European Union does. If you’re in the EU and you think something’s off, you can file a complaint with your local data protection authority.

Wherever you happen to be, should you ever want me to delete our correspondence from my Gmail account and my Contacts panel, just let me know and I’ll take care of it.

Eoin O’Carroll

eoin.ocarroll@gmail.com