Terms of service.
All rights, including copyright, in our website, are owned by, or licensed to, Meta4 Dance as permitted by applicable law.
In accessing Meta4 Dance’s web pages, you agree that you will access the contents solely for your own private use but not for any commercial or public purposes. Material may not be copied, reproduced, republished, downloaded, posted, broadcast or transmitted in any way except for your own personal, non-commercial home use.
Except as permitted above, you undertake not to copy, store in any medium (including on any other website), distribute, transmit, re-transmit, broadcast, modify, or show in public any part of the Meta4 Dance website without our prior written consent or in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
You agree to use this site only for lawful purposes, and in a manner that does not infringe the rights of, or restrict or inhibit the use and enjoyment of this site by any third party. Such restriction or inhibition includes, without limitation, conduct which is unlawful, or which may harass or cause distress or inconvenience to any person and the transmission of obscene or offensive content or disruption of normal flow of dialogue within this site.
You are not permitted to link to or use all or any part of Meta4 Dance’s website for any reason which is unlawful, defamatory, harmful obscene or objectionable. You are, in particular, not permitted to transmit anything which, in Meta4 Dance’s opinion, harms its business or in any way offends other users or persons.
You are also not permitted to alter Meta4 Dance’s website in any way or post onto or transmit to our website, any material containing software viruses or files which may damage or disrupt the good working order of computer or telecommunications equipment. We reserve the right to remove anything which is transmitted to the site, which we believe to be objectionable or that does not comply with our terms and conditions.
Meta4 Dance will not be liable for any losses incurred by you in connection with your use of this website, for any delay in using or your inability to use the website, for any information or products obtained through the website or for any material posted to the website by users of the website.
Meta4 Dance’s website may contain hyperlinks to websites operated by parties other than ours. The operation of such websites is outside Meta4 Dance’s control and you proceed at your own risk. Meta4 Dance does not endorse or sponsor and is not liable for the products, services or content you access through any linked site.
Cookies
What is a cookie?
The Meta4 Dance website uses cookies. When you enter a site your computer will automatically be issued with a cookie. Cookies are simple text files that identify your computer to our server. Cookies in themselves do not identify the individual user, just the computer used. Many sites do this whenever a user visits their site in order to track traffic flows.
Third party cookies
Third party cookies are set by a different organisation to the owner of the website you are visiting. Motionhouse use third party analytics companies who set their own cookies to perform this service. We use a Statcounter cookie that counts the number of unique visitors we have visiting the site and how many of these are first time or returning visitors. The cookie does not provide Meta4 Dance with any other information apart from the numbers of visitors to the site.
Meta4 Dance use Google Analytics, a popular web analytics service provided by Google, Inc. Google Analytics uses cookies to help us to analyse how our users use the site. It counts the number of visitors we have and tells us things about their behaviour overall – such as the typical length of stay on the site or the average number of pages a user views. This helps us to get a better understanding about our online audience and how they use the Meta4 Dance site. We can then accordingly make improvements and developments to our site relevant to our users that will encourage greater interaction and create a better user experience.
Google Analytics
Google Analytics may collect information about your computer, including your IP address, operating system and browser type, for system administration and in order to create reports. This is statistical data about our users’ browsing actions and patterns, and does not identify any individual. Google Analytics helps us understand how visitors engage with our website by providing us with a variety of reports about how our visitors interact with our website so that we can improve it.
Like many services, Google Analytics uses first-party cookies to track visitor interactions as in our case, where they are used to collect information about how visitors use our site. We then use the information to compile reports and to help us improve our site.
Cookies contain information that is transferred to your computer’s hard drive. These cookies are used to store information, such as the time that the current visit occurred, whether the visitor has been to the site before and what site referred the visitor to the web page.
Google Analytics collects information anonymously. It reports website trends without identifying individual visitors. You can opt out of Google Analytics without affecting how you visit our site – for more information on opting out of being tracked by Google Analytics across all websites you use,
visit this Google page.
StatcounterIs_uniqueThis cookie counts the number of unique visitors we have visiting the site and how many of these are first time or returning visitors. Likewise this cookies collect information in an anonymous form.Click here for an overview of Statcounter’s privacy policy
YouTube cookies
We embed videos from our official YouTube channel using their privacy-enhanced mode. This mode may set cookies on your computer once you click on the YouTube video player, but YouTube will not store personally-identifiable cookie information for playbacks of embedded videos using the privacy-enhanced mode. To find out more please visit YouTube’s embedding videos information page.
What to do if you don’t want cookies to be set
Cookies themselves only record those areas of the site that have been visited by the computer in question, and for how long. You have the opportunity to set your computers to accept all cookies, to notify you when a cookie is issued, or not to receive cookies at any time. Some people find the idea of a website storing information on their computer or mobile device a bit intrusive. If you prefer, it is possible to block some or all cookies, or even to delete cookies that have already been set; but you need to be aware that you might lose some functions of the website.
If you don’t want to receive cookies, you can modify your browser so that it notifies you when cookies are sent to it or you can refuse cookies altogether. You can also delete cookies that have already been set.
If you wish to restrict or block web browser cookies which are set on your device then you can do this through your browser settings; the ‘Help function’ within your browser should tell you how. Alternatively, you may wish to visit www. aboutcookies.org which contains comprehensive information on how to do this on a wide variety of desktop browsers.
Further information
If you have any questions about cookies or would just like to find out more information about cookies these sites may be helpful: