Troypoint IPTV Cookies Policy
The cookies we set, why each one runs, and the controls you have over them — written without the legal fog.
This page explains how Troypoint IPTV uses cookies and similar storage on troypointiptv.cam, what each category does, and the choices you can make at any time. For the bigger picture on how we treat your personal data, take a look at our Privacy Policy.
1. What Cookies Actually Are
A cookie is a tiny text file your browser stores when you load a website. It can hold a session ID, a language code, or a flag that says you've already seen the consent banner. The site reads that file on your next visit so you don't have to start from scratch every time.
Some cookies disappear the second you close the tab — those are session cookies. Others stick around for days, weeks, or up to twelve months. We also use localStorage in a couple of places, which works the same way but lives inside the browser rather than as a separate file.
2. The Categories We Use
Strictly Necessary
These keep the basics working. Without them you can't submit the trial form, the consent banner won't remember your answer, and CSRF protection on lead forms breaks. You can't switch them off without breaking the site, so they don't appear in the consent banner.
| Name | Purpose | Duration |
|---|---|---|
cookie_consent |
Remembers which categories you've accepted or declined | 12 months (cookie + localStorage) |
tpt_session |
Holds the temporary session for form submissions | Session only |
csrf_token |
Stops cross-site request forgery on trial and contact forms | Session only |
Functional
These aren't critical, but they make the site feel right on a return visit. If you pick a language or set the device-count toggle on the pricing page, that choice lives in a functional cookie so you don't have to redo it every time.
| Name | Purpose | Duration |
|---|---|---|
tpt_lang |
Stores your language preference | 12 months |
tpt_devices |
Remembers the device-count picker on the pricing page | 6 months |
Analytics
We run Google Analytics 4 (or an equivalent privacy-focused tool) to see which pages get attention and where people drop off. IP addresses are anonymised before storage, and we don't try to identify individuals from the data. Analytics only fires once you've accepted it in the banner.
| Name | Purpose | Duration |
|---|---|---|
_ga |
Separates one anonymous visitor from another | Up to 24 months |
_ga_* |
Tracks the current analytics session state | Up to 24 months |
Marketing
Marketing cookies only run after you've ticked the marketing box in the banner — not before. When they're on, they help us measure whether an ad on Facebook or Google led to a sign-up, so we know which campaigns are worth keeping. Decline this category and you'll still see ads, just not ones tailored from your visit here.
3. Third-Party Cookies
A few features on the site load code from other companies, and those companies set their own cookies when they run:
- Stripe and PayPal: If you click through to a payment page, the processor sets fraud-prevention and session cookies on its own domain. We can't read those, and they're governed by the processor's privacy policy.
- WhatsApp Business widget: The chat button opens WhatsApp Web or the app. Meta may set cookies during that handoff — those are covered by Meta's policy, not ours.
- Google Fonts / CDNs: Static assets sometimes route through a CDN that drops a short-lived cookie for load balancing.
We don't share data with these providers beyond what's needed for them to do their job.
4. Consent — How It Works
If you're visiting from the EU, UK, or Switzerland, a consent banner appears on your first page load. Nothing in the analytics or marketing categories fires until you make a choice. Your answer is saved in localStorage plus a backup cookie so the banner doesn't badger you on every page.
Outside those regions, analytics may run by default under a legitimate-interest basis, but you can still opt out using the reset button below. We treat the choice the same either way.
5. How to Manage Cookies
Reopen the banner
Hit the button below to wipe your stored consent. The banner pops up again on the next reload, and you can change any category.
Browser-level controls
Every modern browser lets you block cookies site-by-site or across the board:
- Chrome: Settings → Privacy and security → Cookies and other site data
- Firefox: Options → Privacy & Security → Cookies and Site Data
- Safari: Preferences → Privacy → Manage Website Data
- Edge: Settings → Cookies and site permissions → Cookies and site data
Heads up: blocking everything breaks login, forms, and the consent banner itself. We'd suggest blocking third-party cookies first and seeing how that feels.
Opt out of Google Analytics
If you want a stronger guarantee across every site you visit, grab the Google Analytics Opt-out Browser Add-on. It stops the GA script from loading entirely.
6. How Long Cookies Stick Around
Session cookies vanish when you close the browser. Persistent ones expire after the duration listed in the tables above — never more than twelve months for anything we set ourselves. If you don't return to the site, your browser will sweep them when they hit their expiry date.
7. Changes to This Policy
We'll tweak this page when we add a new tool, drop one we no longer use, or when regulations shift. Whenever something material changes, you'll see a fresh date at the top. Significant updates may also trigger a re-prompt of the consent banner so you can reconfirm your choices.
8. Contact
If anything here isn't clear, head over to our contact page and send a message. We aim to reply within two business days.