How Cookies Are Used on Our Website for Advertising and Personalization

We use cookies on our website to deliver content, present advertisements, and measure their performance. Here’s a breakdown of the types of cookies we use:

1. Essential Cookies:
These cookies are necessary for the proper functioning of our services. They cannot be switched off in our systems.

2. Performance Cookies:
These cookies help us collect information about how visitors use our website. This includes counting visits and traffic sources, allowing us to measure and improve performance.

3. Personalization Cookies:
These cookies enable personalized services and enhance functionality on our site. They may be set by us or third-party providers.

4. Advertising Cookies:
These cookies are used for advertising purposes, such as building a profile of your interests and showing you relevant ads on this and other properties.

5. Social Media Cookies:
We use social media services to enable sharing tools, but these cookies also track your browser across sites, creating profiles of your interests.

Our cookies can store or read information from devices to recognize them, facilitating app or website connections. Advertising presented is based on limited data such as the website you’re using, device type, and content interactions.

We share cookie information with partners based on consent or legitimate interest. You can exercise your right to consent or object to legitimate interest purposes in our Transparency and Consent Framework link.

Measuring advertising performance helps us understand audience insights and develop improved services. Reports can be generated combining user profiles, statistics, and analytics data for identifying common characteristics among users.

Your data is used to prevent unusual activity, ensure proper systems function, and deliver content securely.

Note: By using this website, you agree to our cookie usage policy as outlined in our Privacy Policy notice.

Source: https://www.cbsnews.com/chicago/video/texas-measles-outbreak-draws-concerns-from-chicago-doctor