Privacy

EMBRÆN is built to ask very little of you. This page explains, plainly, what the site does and does not collect.

What the site collects

Nothing. EMBRÆN is a static website with no accounts, no checkout, and no forms. It does not collect or store any personal information about you, and it has no database that could.

What the site does not collect

If you write a sentence into the homepage and “step inside,” those words stay in your browser and are released when you leave. They are never stored, never sent anywhere, and never tied to you. The moment is yours.

Purchases happen off-site

When you buy a book, you do so through Lulu (print) or Payhip (digital). Any payment, shipping, or account information you provide there is handled under their privacy policies, not this one. EMBRÆN never sees your payment details.

Analytics

EMBRÆN uses no analytics. There is no measurement script, no fingerprinting, and no third-party tracking of any kind. We do not know who visits, and we’re glad not to.

Cookies

The site sets no cookies — none for functionality, none for advertising, and none for cross-site tracking. Nothing is written to your device beyond what your own browser caches to display the pages.

Children

EMBRÆN collects no personal information from anyone, including children under 13. No parental consent is required, because nothing is gathered in the first place.

Your rights

Indiana residents have rights under the Indiana Consumer Data Protection Act — to access, correct, delete, and port their personal data, and to opt out of its sale. Because EMBRÆN holds no personal data about you and sells none, there is nothing here to access, change, or opt out of. If you ever have a privacy question, write to moorepathwaysllc@gmail.com and we’ll answer plainly. Anything tied to a purchase is held by Lulu or Payhip under their own policies.

Last updated June 26, 2026. Moore Pathways LLC.

Provided in good faith and may be updated; informational, not legal advice. Drafted with reference to the Indiana Consumer Data Protection Act (Ind. Code art. 24-15), the U.S. FTC’s privacy guidance, and the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (16 CFR Part 312).