Imprint

Imprint

Information obligation according to § 5 TMG.

Kambas GmbH
Broicher Str. 15
41179 Mönchengladbach
Tel: +49 2161 2956470
Germany

St. No.: 121 / 5726 / 5283
Register: commercial register
Register number: HRB 19253
Register court: Monchengladbach


Email: kontakt@kambas.de

Managing director
Bastian Kames

You have the possibility to prevent actions you have taken here from being analyzed and linked. This will protect your privacy, but will also prevent the owner from learning from their actions and improving usability for you and other users. Your visit to this website is currently recorded by the Matomo web analysis.

You may choose to prevent this website from aggregating and analyzing the actions you take here. Doing so will protect your privacy, but will also prevent the owner from learning from your actions and creating a better experience for you and other users.

Source: Created with the Imprint generator by adsimple in cooperation with hashtagbeauty.de

EU Dispute Resolution

According to the regulation on online dispute resolution in consumer matters (ODR regulation), we would like to inform you about the online dispute resolution platform (OS platform).
Consumers have the opportunity to submit complaints to the European Commission’s Online Dispute Resolution Platform. http://ec.europa.eu/odr?tid=321160124 to judge. The necessary contact details can be found above in our imprint.

However, we would like to point out that we are not willing or obliged to participate in dispute resolution procedures before a consumer arbitration board.

Liability for the content of this website

We constantly develop the content of this website and strive to provide correct and up-to-date information. According to the Telemedia Act (TMG) §7 (1) As a service provider, we are responsible for our own information we provide for use under general laws. Unfortunately, we cannot assume any liability for the correctness of all content on this website, especially for those provided by third parties. As a service provider within the meaning of §§ 8 to 10, we are not obliged to monitor the information you provide or store it or to investigate circumstances that indicate illegal activity.

Our obligations to remove information or to block the use of information under general laws due to court or official orders remain unaffected even in the event of our non-responsibility according to §§ 8 to 10.

If you notice any problematic or illegal content, please contact us immediately so that we can remove the illegal content. You can find the contact details in the imprint.

Liability for links on this website

Our website contains links to other websites for the content of which we are not responsible for. We are not liable for linked websites because we have not known and have no knowledge of illegal activities, we have not noticed such illegalities and we would remove links immediately if we become aware of illegalities.

If you notice illegal links on our website, please contact us. You can find the contact details in the imprint.

Copyright Notice

All content on this website (images, photos, texts, videos) is subject to the copyright of the Federal Republic of Germany. Please ask us before you distribute, reproduce or reuse the content of this website, such as re-release on other websites. If necessary, we will legally prosecute the unauthorized use of parts of the content of our site.

If you find content on this website that infringes copyright, we ask you to contact us.

picture credits

The images, photos and graphics on this website are protected by copyright.

The image rights are owned by the following photographers and companies:

  • Kambas GmbH

Privacy Policy

Privacy

We have written this data protection declaration (version 08.03.2020-321160124) to inform you in accordance with the specifications of the General Data Protection Regulation (EU) 2016/679 explain what information we collect, how we use data and what choices you have as a visitor to this website.

Unfortunately, it is in the nature of things that these explanations sound very technical, but we tried to describe the most important things as simply and clearly as possible when creating them.

cookies

Our website uses HTTP cookies to store user-specific data.
In the following we explain what cookies are and why they are used to better understand the following privacy policy.

What exactly are cookies?

Whenever you browse the internet, use a browser. Known browsers include Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Internet Explorer and Microsoft Edge. Most websites store small text files in your browser. These files are called cookies.

One thing cannot be dismissed out of hand: Cookies are really useful little helpers. Almost all websites use cookies. More precisely, they are HTTP cookies, since there are also other cookies for other areas of application. HTTP cookies are small files that are stored on your computer from our website. These cookie files are automatically accommodated in the cookie folder, so to speak, the “brain” of your browser. A cookie consists of a name and a value. When defining a cookie, one or more attributes must also be specified.

Cookies save certain user data from you, such as language or personal page settings. When you visit our page again, your browser will transmit the “user-related” information back to our site. Thanks to the cookies, our website knows who you are and offers you your usual default setting. In some browsers, each cookie has its own file, in others such as Firefox, all cookies are stored in a single file.

There are both first-party cookies and third-party cookies. First-party cookies are created directly from our site, third-party cookies are created by partner websites (e.g. Google Analytics). Each cookie is to be evaluated individually, since each cookie stores different data. The expiration time of a cookie also varies from a few minutes to a few years. Cookies are not software programs and do not contain viruses, trojans or other ‘pests’. Cookies also cannot access information from your PC.

For example, cookie data can look like:

  • Name: _ga
  • Expiry time: 2 years
  • Use: Differentiation of website visitors
  • Exemplary value: GA1.2.1326744211.152321160124

A browser should support the following minimum sizes:

  • A cookie should contain at least 4096 bytes
  • At least 50 cookies can be stored per domain
  • A total of at least 3000 cookies should be able to be stored

What types of cookies are there?

The question of which cookies we use in particular depends on the services used and will be clarified in the following sections of the data protection declaration. At this point we would like to briefly go into the different types of HTTP cookies.

You can distinguish 4 types of cookies:

Absolutely necessary cookies
These cookies are necessary to ensure basic functions of the website. For example, these cookies are needed if a user puts a product in the shopping cart, then surfs on other pages and only goes to checkout later. These cookies do not delete the shopping cart even if the user closes his browser window.

Functional cookies
These cookies collect information about the user behavior and whether the user gets any error messages. In addition, these cookies also measure the loading time and behavior of the website in different browsers.

Target-oriented cookies
These cookies ensure better user-friendliness. For example, entered locations, font sizes or form data are saved.

Advertising Cookies
These cookies are also called targeting cookies. They are used to provide the user with customized advertising. This can be very practical, but also very annoying.

Usually, when you visit a website for the first time, you will be asked which of these types of cookies you would like to allow. And of course this decision is also stored in a cookie.

How can I delete cookies?

You decide for yourself how and whether you want to use cookies. Regardless of which service or website the cookies come, you always have the option of deleting cookies, only partially allowing or deactivating them. For example, you can block third-party cookies, but allow all other cookies.

If you want to determine which cookies were stored in your browser if you want to change or delete cookie settings, you can find this in your browser settings:

Chrome: Delete, activate and manage cookies in Chrome

Safari: Managing Cookies and Site Data with Safari

Firefox: Delete cookies to remove data that websites have stored on your computer

Internet Explorer: Delete and manage cookies

Microsoft Edge: Delete and manage cookies

If you do not want cookies in principle, you can set up your browser so that it always informs you when a cookie is to be set. So you can decide for each individual cookie whether you allow the cookie or not. The procedure varies depending on the browser. It is best to search for the instructions in Google with the search term “delete cookies chrome” or “disable cookies chrome” in the case of a chrome browser or swap the word “chrome” for the name of your browser, e.g. Firefox, Safari off.

How about my privacy?

Since 2009, the so-called “cookie guidelines” have existed. It states that the storage of cookies requires the consent of the website visitor (i.e. from you). However, there are still very different reactions to these guidelines within the EU countries. In Germany, the cookie guidelines were not implemented as national law. Instead, this directive was implemented largely in Section 15 (3) of the Telemedia Act (TMG).

If you want to know more about cookies and don’t shy away from technical documentation, we recommend https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6265, the request for comments of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) called ‘HTTP State Management Mechanism’.

rights according to the General Data Protection Regulation

According to the GDPR, you have the following rights in principle:

  • Right to rectification (Article 16 GDPR)
  • Right to Deletion (‘Right to Be Forgotten’) (Article 17 GDPR)
  • Right to restriction of processing (Article 18 GDPR)
  • Right to Notice – Obligation to Notify in connection with the correction or deletion of personal data or the restriction of processing (Article 19 GDPR)
  • Right to data portability (Article 20 GDPR)
  • Right to object (Article 21 GDPR)
  • right not to be subject to a decision based solely on automated processing — including profiling — (Article 22 GDPR)

If you believe that the processing of your data violates data protection law or if your data protection claims have otherwise been violated in any way, you can contact the Federal Commissioner for Data Protection and Freedom of Information (BFDI) turn

Evaluation of visitor behavior

In the following data protection declaration, we inform you whether and how we evaluate data of your visit to this website. The evaluation of the data collected is usually anonymous and we cannot infer that your behavior on this website will infer you.

You can find out more about the possibilities of this evaluation of the visit data in the following data protection declaration.

TLS encryption with HTTPS

We use HTTPS to transfer data securely on the Internet (data protection through technology design Article 25(1) GDPR). By using TLS (Transport Layer Security), an encryption protocol for secure data transmission on the Internet, we can ensure the protection of confidential data. You can recognize the use of this protection of data transmission by the small lock symbol in the top left of the browser and the use of the https (instead of HTTP) scheme as part of our Internet address.

Google Maps Privacy Policy

We use Google Maps from Google Inc. (1600 Amphitheater Parkway Mountain View, CA 94043, USA) on our website. With Google Maps, we can visually display locations better and thus improve our service. By using Google Maps, data is transferred to Google and stored on the Google servers. Here we want to go into more detail about what Google Maps is, why we use this Google service, what data is stored and how you can prevent this.

What is Google Maps?

Google Maps is an online map service from Google Inc. With Google Maps you can search the Internet via a PC or via an app for exact locations of cities, sights, accommodation or companies. If companies are represented on Google My Business, other information about the company will be displayed in addition to the location. In order to display the route option, map sections of a location can be integrated into a website using HTML code. Google Maps displays the earth’s surface as a road map or as an air or satellite image. Thanks to the Street View images and the high-quality satellite images, very precise representations are possible.

Why do we use Google Maps on our website?

All of our efforts on this site pursue the goal of providing you with a useful and meaningful time on our website. By incorporating Google Maps, we can provide you with the most important information about various locations. Thanks to Google Maps, you can see where we have our company headquarters at a glance. The directions will always show you the best or fastest way to us. You can access routes by car, public transport, on foot or by bike. For us, providing Google Maps is part of our customer service.

What data is stored by Google Maps?

In order for Google Maps to fully offer their service, the company must record and store data from you. These include, among other things, the entered search terms, their IP address and the width or length coordinates. If you use the route planner function, the entered start address is also saved. However, this data storage happens on the Google Maps website. We can only inform you about this, but do not influence it. Since we have included Google Maps in our website, Google sets at least one cookie (name: NID) in your browser. This cookie stores data about your user behavior. Google uses this data primarily to optimize its own services and provide individual, personalized advertising for you.

The following cookie is set due to the integration of Google Maps in your browser:

  • Name: nid
  • expiration time: After 6 months
  • Usage: NID is used by Google to customize ads to your Google search. With the help of the cookie, Google ‘remembers’ your most frequently entered search queries or your previous interaction with ads. So you always get tailor-made ads. The cookie contains a unique ID that Google uses to collect personal settings of the user for advertising purposes.
  • Example value: 188=H26C1KTHA7FCQTX8RXGLYATYITJ321160124

Note: We cannot guarantee completeness in the information of the stored data. Especially when using cookies, changes at Google can never be ruled out. In order to identify the cookie NID, a separate test page was created, where only Google Maps was integrated.

How long and where is the data stored?

The Google servers are in data centers around the world. However, most servers are in America. For this reason, your data is also increasingly stored in the USA. Here you can read exactly where the Google data centers are: https://www.google.com/about/datacenters/inside/locations/?hl=de

Google distributes data on different data disks. As a result, the data can be called up more quickly and is better protected against any attempts at manipulation. Each data center also has special emergency programs. For example, if there are problems with Google hardware or a natural disaster affects the servers, the data is most likely protected.

Google stores some data for a specified period of time. With other data, Google only offers the option of deleting it manually. Furthermore, the company also anonymizes information (such as advertising data) in server logs by deleting part of the IP address and cookie information after 9 or 18 months.

How can I delete my data or prevent data storage?

With the automatic deletion function of location and activity data introduced in 2019, location determination and web/app activity information is stored and then deleted either for 3 or 18 months, depending on your decision. You can also delete this data manually from the history at any time via the Google account. If you want to completely prevent your location capture, you must pause the “Web and App activity” section in the Google account. Click Data and Personalization, then click on the Activity Setting option. Here you can switch the activities on or off.

You can also deactivate, delete or manage individual cookies in your browser. Depending on the browser you are using, this works in different ways. The following guides show you how to manage cookies in your browser:

Chrome: Delete, activate and manage cookies in Chrome

Safari: Managing Cookies and Site Data with Safari

Firefox: Delete cookies to remove data that websites have stored on your computer

Internet Explorer: Delete and manage cookies

Microsoft Edge: Delete and manage cookies

If you do not want cookies in principle, you can set up your browser so that it always informs you when a cookie is to be set. So you can decide for each individual cookie whether you allow it or not.

Google is an active participant in the EU-U.S. Privacy Shield Framework, which regulates the correct and secure data transfer of personal data. You can find more information about this at https://www.privacyshield.gov/participant?id=a2zt000000001l5aai. If you want to learn more about Google’s data processing, we recommend the company’s own data protection declaration at https://policies.google.com/privacy?hl=de.

Automatic data storage

When you visit websites nowadays, certain information is automatically created and stored, including on this website.

If you are visiting our website as it is now, our web server (computer on which this website is stored) automatically saves data such as

  • The address (URL) of the accessed website
  • Browser and browser version
  • The operating system used
  • The address (URL) of the previously visited page (referrer URL)
  • The host name and IP address of the device from which access is accessed
  • Date and time

in files (web server log files).

Web server log files are usually stored for two weeks and then deleted automatically. We do not pass on this data, but we cannot rule out that this data will be viewed in the presence of illegal behavior.

Source: Created with the Privacy Generator by adsimple in cooperation with 123familie.de