carlwgeorge / centos / centos.org

Forked from centos/centos.org 3 years ago
Clone
Text Blame History Raw

title: "CentOS Privacy Policy" markdown: basic is_dynamic: true


  • Table of contents will replace this text. {:toc}

Scope of this Notice

This Privacy Statement is intended to describe the CentOS Project's privacy practices and to provide information about the choices you have regarding the ways in which information is collected by the CentOS Project is used and disclosed. For Convenience, the CentOS Project is referred to in this document as "CentOS".

Our Commitment to Privacy

At CentOS, your privacy is important to us. To better protect your privacy, we have provided this Statement explaining our information practices and the choices you can make about the way your personal information is collected, used and disclosed. To make this Statement easy to find, we have made it available on our homepage and at every location where personally-identifiable information may be requested.

The Information We Collect

This Privacy Statement applies to all information collected by or submitted to CentOS, including personal information. "Personal information" is data that reasonably can be used to identify or describe an individual.

CentOS collects personal information when:

  • you create an online account with CentOS. Examples include but are not limited to:
  • Forums
  • mailing lists
  • Bug tracking
  • Wiki
  • you participate in surveys and evaluations
  • you participate in promotions, contests or giveaways
  • you submit questions or comments to us.

CentOS may also collect personal information from individuals (with their consent) at conventions, trade shows and expositions. The types of personal information collected may include (but is not limited to):

  • your first and last name
  • your title and your company's name
  • your address
  • your country code
  • your email address
  • your telephone number
  • any additional information that helps us make physical or online contact with you
  • your GPG key ID
  • your ssh public key
  • your irc nickname
  • your language preference
  • your timezone
  • your geographic coordinates
  • your affiliation(s).

Publicly Available Personal Information

In keeping with the open nature and spirit of CentOS, some personal information attached to CentOS accounts is made public by default. Specifically:

  • your first and last name
  • your country code
  • your email address
  • your language preference
  • your ssh public key
  • your timezone
  • your GPG key ID (if defined)
  • your irc nickname (if defined)
  • your geographic coordinates (if defined)

If you wish for this information to be kept private, you can opt-out of displaying this information publicly in your account preferences. If you choose to opt out, CentOS will still have access to this information, but it will not be displayed to others, and will be considered private. The only exceptions to this are for your name and email address, as these may still be visible in some services such as our bug tracking system.

Using your Personal Information

CentOS users the personal information you provide to:

  • create and maintain your accounts
  • answer your questions
  • send you information

We also use this personal information to provide you with information related to your account and the projects or services you acquire from us, to improve our service, and to personalize communications.

Sharing your Personal Information

Unless you assent, CentOS will never share the personal information you provide us except as described below:

CentOS may disclose your information to third parties under any of the following circumstances:

  • Publicly Available Personal Information is openly available unless the CentOS account holder opts-out (as already described in this Privacy Statement).
  • As may be required to provide service, and for e-mail housing (as a consequence of uses already described in this Privacy Statement).
  • As required by law (such as responding to a valid subpoena, warrant, audit, or agency action, or to prevent fraud)
  • For research activities, including the production of statistical reports (such aggregated information is used to describe our services and is not used to contact the subjects of the report).

Your Choices about Receiving E-mail

CentOS may send you e-mail about your account, to inform you of important upcoming CentOS events (e.g. Dojo event changes), or in response to your questions. For your protection, CentOS may contact you in the event that we find an issue that requires your immediate attention.

Cookies and other Browser Information

CentOS's online services automatically capture IP addresses. We use IP addresses to help diagnose problems with our servers, to administer our website, and to help ensure the security of your interaction with our services. Your IP address is used to help identify you and your location.

As part of offering and providing customizable and personalized services, CentOS uses cookies to store and sometimes track information about you. A cookie is a small amount of data that is sent to your browser from a Web server and stored on your computer's hard drive. All sections of centos.org where you are prompted to log in or that are customizable require your browser to accept cookies.

Generally, we use cookies to:

  • Remind us of who you are and to access your account information (stored on our computers) in order to provide a better and more personalized service. This cookie is set when you register or "sign in" and is modified when you "sign out" of our services.
  • Measure certain traffic patterns, which areas of CentOS's network of websites you have visited, and your visiting patterns in the aggregate. We use this research to understand how our user's habits are similar or different from one another so that we can make each new experience on centos.org a better one. We may use this information to better personalize the content, banners, and promotions you and other users will see on our sites.

If you do not want your personal information to be stored by cookies, you can configure your browser so that it always rejects these cookies or asks you each time if you accept them or not. However, you must understand that the use of cookies may be necessary to provide certain services, and choosing to reject cookies will reduce the performance and functionality of the site. Your browser documentation includes precise instructions explaining how to define the acceptance of cookies.

Our Commitment to Data Security

CentOS trains its administrators on our privacy policy guidelines and makes our privacy policy available to our partners. Our website uses Secure Socket Layer (SSL) technology, which encrypts your personal information when you send your personal information on our website. In addition, CentOS and its partners enter into confidentiality agreements which require that care and precautions be taken to prevent loss, misuse, or disclosure of your personal information.

Public Forums Reminder

CentOS often makes chat rooms, forums, mailing lists, message boards, and/or news groups available to its users. Please remember that any information that is disclosed in these areas becomes public information. Exercise caution when deciding to disclose your personal information. Although we value individual ideas and encourage free expression, CentOS reserves the right to take necessary action to preserve the integrity of these areas, such as removing any posting that is vulgar or inappropriate.

Our commitment to Children's Online Privacy

Out of special concern for children's privacy, CentOS does not knowingly accept online personal information from children under the age of 13. CentOS does not knowingly allow children under the age of 13 to become registered members of our sites. CentOS does not knowingly collect or solicit personal information about children under 13.

In the event that CentOS ever decides to expand its intended site audience to include children under the age of 13, those specific web pages will, in accordance with the requirements of the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA), be clearly identified and provide an explicit privacy notice addressed to children under 13. In addition, CentOS will provide an appropriate mechanism to obtain parental approval, allow parents to subsequently make changes to or request removal of their children's personal information, and provide access to any other information as required by law.

About Links to other sites

This site contains links to other sites. CentOS does not control the information collection of sites that can be reached through links from the various CentOS websites. If you have questions about the data collection procedures of linked sites, please contact those sites directly.

How to Contact Us

If you have any questions about any of these practices or CentOS's use of your personal information, please feel free to contact us by email at centos-tm@centos.org or by mail at:

Assistant General Counsel
Red Hat, Inc.
100 East Davie Street
Raleigh, NC 27601
fax: +1 919-754-3704