Four Seasons is committed to protecting your privacy. We will only use the information that we collect about you lawfully (in accordance with the Privacy Act 1998). Any information we collect in relation to you is kept strictly secured. We do not pass on, sell, or swap any of your personal details with anyone. We use this information to identify your orders, provide you with our monthly newsletter if you opt in and personalise your shopping experience with us.
Four Seasons uses cookies to allow you to log in to your account, maintain a shopping cart, and purchase items that are in your shopping cart. Cookies sent to your computer from Four Seasons only last while you’re browsing our website. We do not store persistent cookies on your computer. Cookies also allow us to give you a more personalised shopping experience by displaying products that interest you throughout our product pages, thus providing you with a more friendly, interesting, and enjoyable shopping experience.
Whenever you use ours or any other website, the computer on which the web pages are stored (the Web server) needs to know the network address of your computer so that it can send the requested web pages to your Internet browser. The unique network address of your computer is called its “IP address,” and is sent automatically each time you access any Internet site. From a computer’s IP address, it is possible to determine the general geographic location of that computer, but otherwise, it is anonymous.
We do not keep a record of the IP addresses from which users access our site except where you have specifically provided us with information about yourself, in which case we also record your IP address for security purposes. An example of this would be when proceeding to a checkout to finalise an order you may wish to make. After completing the form provided, your IP address will be stored along with a transaction number that allows us to track your order.
When purchasing from Four Seasons your financial details are passed through a secure server using the latest 128-bit SSL (Secure Sockets Layer) encryption technology. 128-bit SSL encryption is approximated to take at least one trillion years to break and is the industry standard.