Cookie Policy
Last updated: 30 mayo 2026
This Cookie Policy explains what cookies are, which cookies nba Betting Expert uses, and how a reader in the United Kingdom can control them. The policy works alongside our Privacy Policy, which sets out how we handle personal data more generally. Both documents are written to comply with the Privacy and Electronic Communications Regulations and the United Kingdom General Data Protection Regulation.
What a cookie is
A cookie is a small text file that a website asks your browser to store on your device when you visit. The next time you return, the website can read the cookie back. Cookies are widely used to make websites work efficiently, to remember reader preferences, and to provide site owners with aggregated information about how the site is being used. Similar technologies, including local storage and pixel tags, are treated the same way as cookies under United Kingdom law and are covered by this policy.
The categories of cookies we use
nba Betting Expert uses a small, deliberately limited set of cookies. We group them into three categories so that you can decide which ones to allow.
Strictly necessary cookies
These cookies are essential for the site to function. They keep the site secure, remember your cookie consent choice, and let you navigate from one page to another without losing context. They cannot be turned off in our systems. Strictly necessary cookies do not store personally identifiable information for marketing purposes. They are set by us, are first-party in nature, and typically expire either at the end of your browsing session or within a short retention window.
Analytics cookies
Analytics cookies help us count visitors, see which articles are most useful, and understand reading patterns in aggregate. Information collected through analytics cookies is processed in a way that does not directly identify individual readers. We use analytics data to improve the quality and accuracy of our editorial work. Analytics cookies are only set if you have given your consent through the cookie banner shown on your first visit. You can withdraw that consent at any time using the controls described below.
Functional cookies
Functional cookies remember the choices you make on the site, such as your preferred font size or any reading-comfort options offered in future. They are first-party and are only set after you have given consent. Functional cookies do not track you across other websites.
Third-party cookies
We do not currently allow third-party advertising or marketing cookies on this site. The analytics provider we use sets one or more cookies on our behalf in order to function. That provider acts as our processor under a written contract and uses the data only for the purposes we have specified. The analytics provider may transfer data outside the United Kingdom under safeguards permitted by United Kingdom data protection law.
Retention periods
Cookies on this site have retention periods set with the principle of data minimisation in mind. Session cookies expire when you close your browser. Persistent cookies, where we use them, are typically set to expire within twelve months at the longest. Where a shorter retention period is technically practical, we use the shorter one.
How to manage cookies
You have several ways to manage cookies on this site.
The first is the cookie banner shown to new visitors and accessible through a «Cookie settings» link in the page footer of every article. The banner lets you accept or refuse non-essential cookies, and to change your decision at any time.
The second is your browser settings. All modern browsers let you view, restrict, or delete cookies. The steps differ between Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Edge, but each browser publishes clear support documentation. You can block all cookies, including strictly necessary ones, but some parts of the site may not work as expected if you do.
The third is a guidance resource provided by the Information Commissioner’s Office at ico.org.uk, which explains your rights about cookies and how to enforce them.
Do Not Track signals
Some browsers offer a Do Not Track signal. There is no agreed standard for how websites should respond to this signal, but nba Betting Expert treats a Do Not Track preference as a sign that the reader prefers stricter privacy controls. Where this signal is present and reliably detected, we treat it as a withdrawal of consent for non-essential cookies.
Changes to this policy
This Cookie Policy may be updated to reflect changes in the technologies we use, in the law, or in industry guidance. The date at the top of this page shows the most recent update. When we make a material change, we will surface the change through the cookie banner so that you can review the new policy and renew your consent if you wish.
Contact
If you have questions about how this Cookie Policy is applied, please contact us through the channels listed on the site. We aim to respond to all reasonable inquiries within a sensible timeframe.