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CONTACT AND INFO

Contact, Imprint, Content Information, Privacy Policy and more.

Content responsibility: Wolf

If you need to contact me about something, you can do so with this email address:

Contact email: contact@wwolf.ink

ABOUT WOLF / ME

I have an ABOUT page for this now.

ABOUT THIS WEBSITE

This website is a space for me to host some projects, computer or game related research, and it also includes my blog if I ever decide to do something with that again.
Mostly though, It’s just a home on the internet for me to be a wolf.

For this site, I use WordPress with the Customify (Lite/Free) theme.

CONTENT

This website is intended for personal use more than anything else. While I want to keep the site open, I’ll reserve myself the right to modify or delete content as needed or restrict access to parts of the website if necessary.

A lot but not all of the content on this website is my own.
I try not to violate any copyright, but please let me know if I have.
I am using embedded content and some content stored on and provided by third parties.
For more information on this stuff, read on below.

NSFW CONTENT

This website may feature NSFW content, but I’ll generally mark that content specifically where applicable.
A [NSFW] mark is a warning for such content.
Clicking links marked as [NSFW] means you agree that you are of legal age and willing to see NSFW content.
I won’t be held responsible for your ignorance towards these warnings.

LEGAL DISCLAIMER

I don’t claim to be an expert, I don’t take responsibility for your actions and I don’t offer any legal or financial advise on this site.
And of course: I try to fact check everything and do thorough research, but errors and missing information can happen, I’m just a wolf.
Always act rational, double check sources and information and “don’t do this at home” and all that.

PRIVACY POLICY, DATA AND COOKIES

I don’t collect data, you can’t comment or make an account here and I don’t do analytics and I don’t do advertising.
I’ve set things up as best as I could with your privacy in mind, any cookies I use are for core website features only.

I use Wordfence to protect the website from attacks which might collect and store some data for that reason. This is for the website’s and also your own safety as a visitor to the site. Also the web service I use to host the site might collect or store some anonymous data for their own reasons, that’s on them and I can’t change that.

For external links and embedded content, I can not control and am not responsible for content on or provided by third party sites, including their use of cookies or tracking. I assume you’re fine with embedded content if you browse the website. Please use various means of tracking protection if you’re not.

ADDITIONAL INFO ON PRIVACY PROTECTION AND CONTROL

As an advocate for privacy, anonymity and safety on the internet, as well as a human-friendly internet, I feel like I should mention that to protect yourself from tracking or other harm on the internet, please use ad-blockers and other tools alongside with common sense and a healthy amount of skepticism (this is especially important in the age of social media).

With AI looming on the horizon, I can’t emphasize enough that the landscape on the web is shifting from putting humans in the priority to putting data in the priority. “You are now less valuable than the data you produce” is a quote from a videogame (Watch Dogs 2), but it’s become our reality, where large AI models are trained on how humans interact with computers. Yes, you too. It will get abused, and there’s nothing you can do to stop it.

The best thing to do is to not make yourself a target, let any dehumanizing efforts be lost on you.
The first and last line of defense against outside control or attempts of influence over your life is yourself.

Some browsers feature built-in tracking protection and adblockers (At the time of writing this, the Brave browser comes to mind), while other browsers would gladly process or sell any data collected on you. On top of that, add-ons exist, and some (especially open/self-hosted) DNS servers offer the option to block ads for you. Take your privacy into your own hands.
Go into your browser’s settings and turn off features that annoy you. For example, I’ve set up my browser to block certain requests like those for push notifications by default, and to clear all cookies automatically when closing, except for a set of whitelisted websites for convenience. It doesn’t impact my day-to-day browsing experience much.

If you are a European resident you have the right to access personal information websites and companies hold about you and you have the right to ask that your personal information be corrected, updated, or deleted. Contact any website owner regarding your data in that case. Who knows if they actually follow through, but you can try at least.

VPNs can protect your IP address and can help prevent your internet history from being logged by ISPs, but keep in mind that you’re exchanging one evil for another, and in today’s age, websites and services use other means of tracking than just IPs, some more intrusive than others. If using VPNs, only use trustworthy VPNs.

There’s always more you can do, of course, like not using official apps for services, looking for apps that have tracking removed or removing it yourself if you’re good with code, but I’ll leave it here.