We undertake not to disclose your information to third parties, or entities, and in accordance with section 34 of the Computer and Liberty Act of 6 January 1978, the customer has a right of access, modification, rectification and deletion of the data concerning him.
(Cf. General terms and conditions of sales, Article 20: Information and Freedom).

 

Personal Data Protection Regulation:

•The law recognizes the protection of your personal data. This pharmacy is equipped with a computer system to ensure, manage and deliver products (billing, third-paying, followed by repayments, kept from the order and the Pharmaceutical Record) in strict compliance with the professional secrecy required for pharmacists.

•Some information about your purchases, your social insurance card and your supplementary health insurance card will be subject to a
computer recording.

•The use is exclusively reserved to your pharmacist, within their limits.

•This data can be processed completely anonymously for professional statistical purposes.You can obtain information from your pharmacist about you and, if necessary, ask for an amendment.

•Your pharmacist has put in place the necessary measures to comply with the regulations applicable to the protection of your personal data.

Our friends cookies (the site of the CNIL is very done):

A cookie is a small file stored by a server in the terminal (computer, phone, etc.) of a user and associated with a web domain (i.e. in most cases to all pages of a same website).This file is automatically returned to subsequent contacts with the same domain.

Cookies have multiple uses: they can be used to memorize your customer ID from a merchant site, the current content of your shopping cart, the display language of the web page, an identifier to trace your browsing for statistical or advertising purposes, etc.Some of these uses are strictly necessary for the functionality expressly requested by the user or for the establishment of the communication and therefore exempted from consent.Others, which do not meet these criteria, require user consent before reading or writing.

The distinction between "third" (or "third party") cookies and "internal" (or "first-party") cookie is technical.When a user visits a website, he consults in practice a “domain” that usually ends with an extension of .com or .fr (e.g. monsite.com is a domain), the contents can be transmitted from the domain that he visits or through other domains that he has not entered himself and which belong to third parties.Indeed, each cookie is associated with a domain and sent or received whenever the browser will "call" this domain.In practice:

The “internal” cookies are deposited by the website consulted by the Internet user, specifically on the site’s domain.They can be used for the proper operation of the site or to collect personal data in order to track the user’s behavior and serve for advertising purposes; “third party” cookies are cookies placed on different areas of the main site, generally managed by third parties who have been interviewed by the site visited and not by the Internet user himself: these cookies may also be necessary for the proper operation of the site, but they are mainly used to allow the third party to see which pages have been visited by a user and to collect information about it, especially for advertising purposes. The fact that cookies are “internal” or “third party” is a technical distinction that does not have a consequence of having to request or not consent.In practice, a large majority of “third party” cookies have purposes that require consent (e.g. advertising), but we can also find “third party” cookies that are actually strictly necessary for a feature specifically requested by the user and therefore free from consent.This is the case, for example, cookies that are used only for federated authentication (when a single account allows access to several sites).