Websites use cookies mainly because they save time and make the browsing experience more efficient and enjoyable.
Our use of cookies
When you enter the McKinnon Forbes website, you accept our terms and conditions of use (Terms of Website Use) and our Privacy Policy; a cookie will remember if you have accepted them. This means that you don’t have to re-accept them on every visit. The cookies we use here are ‘persistent’ as they remember your preferences.
We use analytics cookies to collect information on website activity (such as the number of users who visit our website, the date and time of visits, the number of pages viewed, navigation patterns, what country and what systems users have used to access the site and, when entering our website from another website, the address of that web site). This information on its own does not identify an individual but it does provide us with statistics that can be used to analyse and improve our website. These cookies are ‘session’ cookies.
How cookies work
Cookies are small data files that are sent to and stored on your computer, smartphone or other device used to access the internet, whenever you visit a website. We use cookies to enable and improve certain functions on our website and gain feedback on how our website is used. If you choose to switch certain cookies off, it may affect how our website works.
The browsers of most computers, smartphones and other web–enabled devices are usually set up to accept cookies. If your browser preferences allow it, you can configure your browser to accept all cookies, reject all cookies, or notify you when cookies are set. Each browser is different, so check the "Help" menu of your browser to learn about how to change your cookie preferences.
However, please remember that cookies are often used to enable and improve certain functions on a website. If you choose to switch certain cookies off, it may affect how our website and certain functionality works.
More Information about cookies
Cookies for the internet were originally developed in 1995 by the Netscape Communications Corporation. The word 'cookie' comes from 'magic cookie,' a term in programming languages for a piece of information shared between co-operating pieces of software. The choice of the word cookie appears to come from the American tradition of giving and sharing edible cookies.