Cookie policy · last updated 17 June 2026

No advertising cookies. No tracking circus.

The AI Fixer is a static public notebook. It does not run ad tech, behavioural profiling, retargeting pixels or social-media trackers. This page explains the small amount of browser storage and analytics used to keep the site readable and useful.

current state

Cookies set by this site

At the time of this policy, The AI Fixer does not intentionally set first-party cookies for normal reading. A live browser check on the homepage showed an empty document.cookie value.

local storage

Theme preference

If you use the light/dark toggle, the site stores your preference in your browser's localStorage under the key theme. That keeps the page from flashing between themes on your next visit. It is not sent to John and is not used to identify you.

analytics

Privacy-friendly visitor counts

The site loads a small analytics script from stats.theaifixer.com only after you choose Accept analytics in the cookie banner. John uses it to see whether pages are being read. The intention is simple traffic measurement, not advertising, profiling or cross-site tracking.

If analytics tooling changes later, this policy should be updated before the new tooling is treated as acceptable.

external sites

Links away from The AI Fixer

Some pages link to external sites such as AI Mechanic, T-PACE or other public systems. Those sites may have their own cookies, analytics or privacy rules. This policy covers theaifixer.com, not every site linked from it.

control

Your controls

  • You can reject or accept analytics in the banner. The choice is saved in localStorage as aifixer_analytics_consent.
  • You can block cookies or site storage in your browser.
  • You can clear the saved theme preference by clearing site data for theaifixer.com.
  • You can use reader mode, script blockers, RSS, or llms.txt if you prefer a lower-script route.
PLAIN ENGLISH VERSION

The site should behave like a public workshop notebook, not a surveillance product. If it ever needs more invasive tracking than that, the right answer is to stop and rethink the tool — not hide it in small print.