This page explains how cookies, local storage and similar technologies are used within the FirstAIContract public launch platform and how this may evolve in future versions.
Cookies are small text files stored on your device when you visit a website. They help the site remember preferences, settings, interface state and certain interactions.
The current version of FirstAIContract is a public launch layer. It may use only minimal cookie or local storage mechanisms, such as remembering consent choices, interface state, language preferences or witness / certificate flow continuity.
Some pages in the launch version may use local storage to preserve user flow between witness registration, certificate generation, shop actions or welcome-back states. This is used to support continuity of the symbolic participation system and does not by itself mean advanced tracking is active.
Future versions of the platform may include analytics tools, performance monitoring, conversion tracking or marketing tags. These should only be activated after proper notice and user consent where required by law.
Users can control or delete cookies at any time through their browser settings. Disabling cookies or local storage may affect certain functionality of the website, including remembered preferences or continuity between steps.
When required, users will be asked to accept or reject non-essential cookies through a cookie banner or similar mechanism. Essential storage used only for core website operation may remain active without a separate opt-in where legally permitted.
This policy may be updated as the platform evolves and new technologies are introduced, including dashboards, analytics, payment layers, certificates, profiles or other live systems.
For questions about cookies, local storage, consent or technical privacy handling, contact: o.klinac@gmail.com
The launch version of FirstAIContract is designed to avoid unnecessary tracking. The goal is to support trust and continuity, not hidden surveillance.
As the platform expands into accounts, certificates, dashboards, orders and live systems, this policy should expand too — so the legal layer always matches the real technical behavior.