We don’t sell data, we don’t run ad networks, and we don’t share anything with third parties beyond the tools we use to run the site. This page is the plain-English version.
Things you give us directly — when you submit the contact form, sign up for our newsletter, or commission a Living Asset, you give us your name, email, and whatever you wrote in the message fields. We use this to reply to you. That’s it.
Things we observe — anonymous usage data when you browse the site: which pages you visited, what device you’re on, roughly where you’re coming from (country level, not address). No name, no email, no profile.
We use a single analytics tool to understand how the site is used — which pages get attention, where people come from, what breaks. No advertising cookies, no retargeting, no third-party trackers.
Until you click Accept on the cookie banner, no cookies are set and no individual visit is tracked — only aggregate, anonymous counts. Reject keeps it that way; Accept lets the site remember return visits so we can see what brings people back.
Your choice is stored locally in your browser. To change it:
Frame99 runs on a small set of standard hosting, email, and analytics providers. They process your data only on our instructions, and only to make the site work — never to build profiles or sell anything onward.
If you’d like the specific list of providers for due-diligence or DPA purposes, just email us and we’ll send it.
If you’re in the EU, the UK, California, or anywhere with a meaningful data-protection law, you have the right to:
— See what we have on you. Email and ask.
— Correct anything that’s wrong. Email and tell us what to change.
— Delete it all. Email and we’ll wipe your record from our database, our newsletter list, and any reply threads. Done within a week.
— Object to analytics. Click Reject on the consent banner above, or use your browser’s Do-Not-Track / ad-blocking tools.
Privacy questions, deletion requests, or anything else: studio@frame99.world.
Frame99 is operated by an Estonian OÜ. EU users can also contact their national data protection authority if a complaint isn’t resolved.