Eagle Tree Systems, LLC is the sole owner
of the information collected on EagleTreeSystems.com. We have
the highest respect for your privacy, and do not collect or
share any personal information except as outlined below.
Collection of Information:
Order Information:
We request information from you on our order form. We ask
for your name, address and contact information so we can send
you your order, and so we can contact you if we have a question
about your order. We ask for credit card information so we
can fulfill your order, and so we can provide this information
to the company or companies who process your credit card payment.
We do not share any other information with third parties,
except in the case of contact or order information needed
to fulfill your order. We do not share or sell email addresses.
Information we do not collect: When you visit our site, we do not collect your name,
email address or any other personal information unless you
provide it to us.
How we use email: After you place an order on our site, you will receive
an email confirmation.
When you contact us via email or order from us, we will automatically add you to our email mailing list, which we use to announce new Eagle Tree products or rebates.
If you do not wish to be added to our mailing list, just let us know, or use the Remove button included in all of our announcement mailings.
We do not share email addresses third parties,
except in the case of contact or order information needed
to fulfill your order.
Security:
We take every precaution to protect our users’ information.
When users submit sensitive information via this web site,
their information is protected.
When our online order form asks users to enter sensitive
information (such as credit card number), that information
is encrypted and is protected with the best encryption software
in the industry - SSL. While on a secure page, such as our
order form, the lock icon on the bottom of Web browsers such
as Netscape Navigator and Microsoft Internet Explorer becomes
locked, as opposed to un-locked, or open, when users are just
‘surfing’.