Privacy Policy
Last updated April 21, 2026
Summary
This publication is a content site, not a data business. We collect no personally identifying information by default. We run no third-party trackers, no advertising infrastructure, no analytics-aggregator services. The full policy is below.
What we collect by default
When you visit whatsthebestcalorietracking.app, our hosting provider (Amazon Web Services / CloudFront) automatically logs request metadata as part of operating the site:
- The URL of the page requested.
- The HTTP method (typically GET).
- A timestamp of the request.
- The HTTP referrer (where applicable).
- A user-agent string identifying your browser and operating system.
- An IP address of the request, used by AWS for routing and abuse detection.
These logs are retained per AWS standard retention and are used by us only for site operations. We do not combine them with any other identifying information about you. We do not sell or share these logs.
What we do not collect
- No accounts. The publication does not offer reader accounts.
- No newsletter. We do not currently operate an email newsletter.
- No comments. We do not run a comment system.
- No third-party trackers. The site does not load Google Analytics, Facebook Pixel, or any comparable third-party infrastructure.
- No advertising. The site has no advertising infrastructure of any kind.
Cookies
The publication does not set tracking cookies. Strictly-necessary cookies for caching and CDN purposes (e.g., AWS CloudFront session cookies for cache control) may be set; these do not persist personal data and are not used for advertising or cross-site tracking.
Your rights
You have the right to request information about any data we hold about you, request correction, request deletion, and object to processing. Given that we hold essentially no personal data by default, these requests are typically very short to process. Direct requests to editor@whatsthebestcalorietracking.app.
Jurisdiction
The publication operates under Swedish data-protection law and EU GDPR. For US readers, the practices described above are also consistent with US state privacy laws (CCPA, etc.) given that we collect essentially no personal data.