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A NORTHERN IRELAND businessman says he has been denied entry to South Africa because he is deemed as “high risk” in terms of coronavirus.
James Hagan, from Ballyclare, said he has been left “stranded” on the tarmac at Lanseria International Airport, Johannesburg, for the last 36 hours.
The Hagan Homes owner said he and his wife Anne were denied entry to South Africa due to “newly introduced visa restrictions” over the Covid-19 infection.
He has claimed they are being held airside and left to sleep in a vehicle overnight.
The couple had been travelling in Zimbabwe and flew to the airport yesterday on a private charter flight.
They are due to fly home from Cape Town on Sunday on a commercial flight.
Hagan said he and his wife had completed all the necessary health screening forms and waited 27 hours to get the required flight permit to land in Lanseria.
However he said upon arrival at the airport, they were refused entry and told they were deemed to be “high risk”.
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Hagan claimed they were “kept in an interview room for several hours on arrival”.
He said he has been in contact with the local British Embassy.
“I have been here for 36 hours and this is the bed I am sleeping in,” he said, motioning towards a van in a video he sent to media outlets from the tarmac.
“We’re allowed into the building to go to the toilet and nothing else.
“One of the handling agents was good enough to lend us the Volkswagen to sleep in. It is madness.”
Hagan said they cannot leave the airport in the plane they came in because their entry to South Africa has been refused.
He added that his wife Anne is a nurse who wants to help with the coronavirus crisis in the UK. She has previously managed a specialist respiratory clinic.
This trip was described as a “once in a lifetime opportunity” to celebrate Anne’s 60th birthday, but the couple say it has now turned in to a “living nightmare”.
The Foreign Office and the airport have been contacted for a response.
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@The Hidden Revolt: Without the number of test results received, this figure is not that guiding. Did they only get 126 results today, or did they received 2,520.. Did they receive 3k yesterday.
@The Hidden Revolt: this is matter of life and death now! if young people or old people that don’t go along with the new rules to save Irish people lives ! will then then government must come down very heavy on law breakers.and I don’t care if civil liberties groups objects to them….saving lives are paramount!
@Bernard Sweeney: not much pointing in telling people 8 days after !!!! At that stage the symptoms have either gone or the infected persons have done the damage
@GooseSkipGoose: did you miss what I said. If you get tested you’re asked to isolate until you get the results. If you do what you’re told you won’t infect anyone. Simple really.
We are not powerless. The ability to slow this down is literally within our hands.
Wash them.
Socially isolate.
Support frontline workers from the healthcare professionals to the delivery drivers.
Encourage everyone you know to do the same.
@Wheresmyjumper: they only confirm a person has fully recovered after 2 weeks have passed, even if the person perceives to have fully recovered they’re not counted until then.
“143 of the 683 are hospitalised with 12 in ICU. So 540 are recovered or have mild symptoms.”
If true; then we Irish are indeed a unique people. They should clone our genes and spread them worldwide.
Downside: If timely and accurate (and it’s taking several days to get test results in Ireland when the Italian system reckon thier 12 to 24 hour delay makes test data largely ineffective) – then 540 with mild symptoms just means that at least 15% of that number haven’t developed serious symptoms YET.
@Karl Mc Cauley: I’m reasonably sure the recovered number is higher. The family of 4 in Clare definitely all recovered and there was at least 1 in cork, I’d be surprised if they’re the only Irish cases to be recovered.
@thenewguy: ban people from crowding together and implement it. Communities should police these gatherings too, rather. The staff depend on these jobs, if they can stay open and adhere to hse advice they should remain open.
@King B: the problem is I’ve heard of house parties going on, fights breaking out in echo hill the guards and ambulance had to be called. Now this is using extremely fine and thin layered resources. What other option is there?
@Paddy Cullen AIWS: if there was prohibition, maybe just maybe my neighbours would not have had house party on St. Patrick’s day, drinking and playing music all night. I work in hospital, 8 shifts in a row, one day off , repeat. I am seriously annoyed at people who have no understanding whatsoever about what’s going on .
@thenewguy: There’s less for the guards to be doing now that pubs and clubs are shut, report rowdy house parties. People are still going to get together and make the best out of it though. Imagine the panic if they announce the off licences to be shut, not worth thinking about.
@thenewguy: close the lakes! Having a glass of wine in the evening is the only relief many of us get. Hope they weren’t eating as well or you’d be calling for supermarkets to shut!
@King B: looking at News on tv just now.at how young people are ignoring the warnings re distancing , if these young people are the future of Ireland , then Ireland HAS NO future.
@munsterman1: remember when the offies were just difficult to get to and the lidl got opened like a tin can to get at those lovely slabs of cans? Only snowed for three days.
@Irena Cepaitiene: you think people won’t drink if we introduce prohibition, the way they don’t do drugs?? The moonshine market would explode and put further pressure on the health system
@thenewguy: No. Think we got triggered by some snowflake nonce demanding people should basically be banned from having a drink at home. Any why should people be banned from drinking at home ? Because said nonce heard something from someone about someone else having a drink. And not only were they having a drink but they were, horror of all horrors, having a drink beside the lake !!!
@RJ.Fallon: Yeah but what’s rearing them. It’s just that Ireland has a social class now that are just sc$m. Simple as that . Parents are dirt and the kids their dragging up are dirt. Put the army on the streets and sent the little bast@rds home
It’s actually good news. The more the better. Test test test. The more we find, the more people will isolate. The more who isolate, the less it will spread and less amount of people will die. Our numbers are rising because we’ve expanded our testing criteria.
@rosetheone: Remember, these people were infected over a week ago.
The incubation period averages 5.1 days, and then falling sick and then getting a test, that is then made public, takes another 4 days. These people were infected on average 9 days ago i.e. Tuesday March 11th. The figures we see are the state of the epidemic ~9 days ago, before any interventions were in place.
We won’t see any effects of social distancing, school closures, pub and restaurant closures etc., until after 24th March at the earliest.
@miju irl: 7 days is unacceptable, here’s a research paper that says that if test results are known with in 3 days and 75% of contacts are traced, we can then bring the outbreak under control. Anything longer than that wont work.
Kretzschmar, M.E., Rozhnova, G. and van Boven, M.E., 2020. Effectiveness of isolation and contact tracing for containment and slowing down a COVID-19 epidemic: a modelling study. medRxiv.
@David Jordan: So after 7 days infected people can test negative and therefore contact tracing won’t be done? Wow! Not good enough. Counties with higher positive cases seem to be high priority compared to those with less than 5 confirmed cases. There will be an explosion of positive cases.
@miju irl: Where are you getting 7 days from? Our childminders son has a fever and a cough and was been referred to get a test on Wednesday evening at 6pm. She has an appointment for 11:15 tomorrow morning so not even 3 full days.
Get the facts right.
We have only 255 critical care beds.
Latest National ICU audit (2018) shows that our current bed occupancy rate is 88%, upto 96% in some units.
6% of patients who gets COVID need critical care.
With 4.83 million people in Ireland, how can we cope up with a surge in infection?
You can do the maths.
This is why experts advise to do the social distancing, wash hands and avoid any kind of social gathering.
We need to flatten the curve in order to fight this.
Do your bits, we can’t afford to lose our loved ones.
Please be sensible and stay safe. ☘️☘️☘️
@J: could be true, but please done think the beds are doubled or trippled.
The plan was to increase ICU beds to 430 by 2031.
Even if we have 1000, its not adequate if we have an uncontrolled surge of infection.
@J: The Head of Emergency Medicine was in Primetime last night , her actual full statement is covered in another article on journal here today …
But she made it very clear …. don’t get sick with Covid19 in the first place …if you do end up in her place ( LUH iCU ward) as she called it …. at least 1 in 5 you will die .. perhaps more .. she was very matter of fact!
She also re-confirmed we only have 255 ICU beds with 55 more planned by end of month .. that’s the entire country not just Limerick..
Her point , it’s not about ICU beds & Ventilators ..she made the point the vast majority of Doctors & Nurses have no experience of ICU care ..and it takes 18 months to train staff to man an ICU ward
So if you you decide to go the house party make worth .. it could be your last !!
@XvSv: I seen that doctor…and I remember her statements….but that’s not what got my attention. It was the look on her face, the look you see on the actors face in disaster movies when the asteroid is about to hit…. She also said Ireland had basically half the capacity per head of population that Italy had. So then she infected me with the same look… Cos if 50% of the population get this… Well I’m dead for sure. I have asthma, cold, diabetes and I suspect my heart is feeling the toll.
Stay at home we can ride this out…
Although the isolation is making paranoid,
Is Greta Thunberg responsible for this the planet, every country will make there target emissions this year… lol
“First case in Ireland, Thursday last. Six days later five cases.
If that progression continues
10 March – 25 cases
16 March – 125
22 March – 625
28 March – 3,125
ectera, by
21 Arpril 1,953,125″
So far, the first three milestones have been underestimates…and even if Leo’s 15K isn’t reached by end March – we are heading for north of two million cases by 21st April.
@brendan fitzsimons: stop scaremongering. 2 million won’t get infected now. Social distancing etc will result in a dramatically lower number than this. Lower again if things are strengthened.
@brendan fitzsimons: would you be a good boy and write down your maths, unless you’re simply lying and trying to make oit your clever. Remember people who comment on the journal are all experts…. in creeping the rest of the country out. You all need to quiet down, this is embarrassing.
@James Quinn: if all the people on the island of Ireland along side two Irish governments in Dublin and belfast stick together and do what we should do! we can beat this, we are island of only 7 million people lets used this to our advantage!
@James Quinn: I can see it hitting that and more. A 30% increase each day will see us hit 15,912 by April 1st. The average daily increase we have had in the last 7 days has been 33% which is even higher than their predictions.
@Optimus Prime: what mistake is that? The only thing I can see is that Italy didn’t fully understand what was coming at them, we have that benefit but what are we doing to change the outcome?
@Aileen Frost: the Italians didn’t bring it to Ireland, it was the Irish bringing it from there and once a virus is in it will unfortunately spread. That’s why the blame game is no good, it’s about stopping it now.
Wash your hands. Stay away from other people. One person goes to the shop for food, this person uses correct social distancing. This person washes hands upon return. Don’t mix with other people, STAY AT HOME. if you own a teenager, keep them at home, no excuses
Varadkar predicted 15000 cases by end of March. We haven’t even hit 1000 yet and only 10 days left in the month. It’s either going to get way worse or he’s very bad at maths. Let’s hope it’s the latter
@Paul Daly: A 30% increase each day will see us hit 15,912 by April 1st. The average daily increase in the last 7 days has been 33%. This is slightly higher than their predictions.
@Dalya Al-Tulaihi: let’s not start playing those sorts of games of comparisons right now. The last thing that’s needed is scaring people. It’s okay to be realistic but we’ve had 3 deaths this side of the border Italy has had 3,000
@Dalya Al-Tulaihi: this is actually drop from yesterday! And remember these figures are a week old. before the government eventually enforced stricter rules on people behavior!
@Dalya Al-Tulaihi: let’s try to be positive! in the face of this nightmare that the island of Ireland are living in at the moment in time! even the world too!
@Jake Kelly: I never meant the death rate! I was just talking about the infection rate, with how the numbers are jumping up everyday it’s only a matter of time before we see 1000s of infections a day. The death rate didn’t cross my mind when I posted my original comment, I meant in general. Obviously I’d hate for anyone to lose their life to this virus or anything other than a NATURAL death.
I don’t understand why people on the journal love to jump into conclusions.
@Dalya Al-Tulaihi: If so then why not choose China? The comment was ridiculous and came across as a weak effort to accumulate likes. We aren’t catching anybody, merely dealing with a crisis
Nice to see a little drop but can they please publish the number of people tested – these numbers are completely irrelevant without that – e.g. they tested more yesterday so hence the higher number yesterday. Also – we need to plan and try test as many people as possible, even those who now do not have symptoms but who had cold/flu/symptoms in past 2 weeks, and track how many had it previously. That is the only way to get the full picture and get on top of it.
@Spbeak: I don’t believe the current this can identify anyone who has had it and is now over it. Seemingly you spread live virus when your infectious, dead virus when your on the mend. When you’ve recovered they need to check for anti-bodies which would require a blood test, though there’s no accepted anti-body test at the moment. Got this from scientific stuff on the internet so I’m just rehashing other people’s theories.
So many still waiting on tests the last number of days. I understand the HSE are doing their best though. Stay strong folks, keep this at bay as much as we can.
@Rúraíocht: if it comes down tomorrow, I’d say we are winning and it will be an incentive for everyone to to keep going to the finish line… c’mon Ireland
@Paul O’Sullivan: youncant takenitnom a day by day basis. You need to look at the trending over a number of days. We still have too many people.on the streets and in groups. This is going to keep rising for several weeks yet.
@Paul: that sounds promising. Always wondered why their employees did not have their legally mandated amount of space in the workplace. Look at the potential cost of that now !
Can we start publishing the numbers of people who test negative for Coronavirus and in a week or so start publishing the number of people who recover from Coronavirus. That way your not just scaring the public with the stories of how many new cases and how many deaths. Only focusing on the sick and dying portion of this crisis is just going to fuel public fear, panic buying and erratic behaviour. If you gave us something to be positive about it would go a very long way to helping people understand this situation and comply with it more
@Jake Kelly: the more you scare people the more likely they’ll be to accept the measures in place and future harsher ones. That’s basically what Boris has done with his madcap social experiment.
@Jake Kelly: they don’t test you unless you have symptoms, not even close contacts of confirmed cases . In fact they don’t even contact some of the close contacts . It’s not good enough.
Less than yesterday’s which would include the many many more tests been carried out, so this is good news. We know it going to increase and we cannot really prevent it all we can do is slow it down
I live in Oranmore where the vast majority of the citizens are behaving in a very responsible way. Most people while doing their shopping or walking the streets are observing advice on social distancing.
However there are a few groups of young men trespassing on school grounds and community pitches playing football. There’s no one to deal with this antisocial behaviour.
If situation is not dealt with, we will soon be in the same situation as Italy.
@Richard Burke: You are asking them to change what is probably the habits of a lifetime. If their parents are like me they will have been encouraging them to participate in sports all their lives. Now it’s gone 180 degrees. It’s not easy for them. We never saw anything remotely like this, how would we have been at the same age. But I understand your annoyance
The tragedy of this is much of it could have been prevented by stopping flights into the country from affected countries. This wasn’t done apparently because Pascal O’Donoghue didn’t want to offend anyone. What about the health and safe of Irish citizens this should have been the first priority. Grow a pair Paschal.
@Paul Atreides: And it is ordinary Irish people who will pay the highest price for the inept actions of not keeping this disease out of this small surrounded by water island,
Well done on the tracing/testing that is being done, on the face of it it looks awful but ultimately it’s isolating the infection…still to get worse before gets better , keep up the social distance folks!
@Cormac: Figures for next week will be over 1000 per day. Following week likely over 2000 per day. Focusing on minor changes in day to day tallies, and trying to read something into them will just give you false hope and do your head in.
@Tommy Roche: Saturday and Sunday figures will be very important! government must come out now with strong punishments to anyone who breaks law. that includes young and old no discrimination in age!
@Tommy Roche: that far exceeds the estimates that don’t take account of social distancing. You’re saying that in two weeks we’ll have 21000 infected. Nope.
Not trying to oversimplify this but the choice of the younger generation is more green than drink , how many splits do you think are being passed between them even now
Everyone walking the streets in plastic gloves is not hygienic as most look stuck with sweat to their hands and are worn touching everything . I see them getting in and out of cars wearing them . You can’t get the virus through your hands it is through your mouth nose or eyes . Food handlers in supermarkets all in them too who is washing hands ? Also if skin breaks down from sweat much more risky for all sorts of skin infections . Don’t touch face then Go home and immediately Wash hands with liquid soap and warm water forming a lather using friction to dislodge the virus from skin and do so for 20 seconds and your hands will be safe . The glove thing is done to self protect and neglecting others but it makes way more sense to wash hand removing the virus .
When they are doing 100s of tests per day, it’s inevitable that it will rise. It’s going to continue to rise until we we start treating it more seriously, and hopefully then we can start to see the numbers decrease and with recoveries from the virus.
The country should go into lockdown now so we ensure we accelerate the drive down the number of new cases. It will be hugely beneficial in the long run. Government should act now.
Hi Leo where is 80% of our wages being paid by the government if you can’t work due to closures. They are doing this so people can pay bills and have jobs to go back to.
Virgin Media News should cop on. A “SURGE” in the number of cases today. Can they at least attempt some kind of positive spin on it, like the number is lower than yesterday’s. Obviously there should be no complacency but this Sun newspaper type sensationalist reporting aimed at shocking viewers has to stop. They couldn’t wait to jump to “11 armoured trucks in Italy transporting the hordes of dead in coffins to crematoriums across the country”. A bit of common sense wouldn’t go amiss.
It would be helpful to know how many waiting for tests and how many waiting for test results. Applicants for tests on Wed have not heard back yet, no appointments given out, test days away, test results even further away. Contact tracing is pointless and will be much more time consuming with these turnaround times for testing.
If the minimum waiting period for swan test is 4 days & then it takes 3-5 days for results to come in, then are these not the figures from 7-10 days ago?
Plus how many people are waiting to be swabbed & how many have actually been swabbed & reported on?
Media failing, or not being allowed ask these questions on our behalf.
@Dawn Tallon: I always use the gloves provided, can’t stand the stink of diesel. Diesel pumps always seems to be manky but not petrol ones. There’s bound to be an expert on here that can explain that.
Driving through Phibsborough after work today and because there was a bit of sun it was as busy as it would have been pre-pandemic. I hate to say it but we need a lockdown because there are too many selfish gowls in this country.
@Paul Daly: third option: He is taking into account the ones who are infected but haven’t been diagnosed yet. Kids hanging out at the shopping centre tho is driving me nuts. I feel like an oul fella just wanna roar at them to go home!
@Graham Kelly: seen a rake of the little zombies down at centra yesterday hastleing the customers quing up outside and being complete little monsters…. When I was their age someone would have literally grabbed me by the ear and frog marched me home for the hiding of my life!
@Graham Kelly: seen a rake of the little zombies down at centra yesterday hastling the customers quing up outside and being complete little monsters. When I was their age someone would have literally grabbed me by the ear and frog marched me home for the hiding of my life!
I am still working in a factory, i know it’s a loss of money but i do belive everywhere has to close down. A lot of people don’t stick to the rules we even had a fella coughing and runny nose but he trying his best to try hide it. Work is no longer fun, it’s just total paranoia with a lot of people in the work force. Lack of comuncation, keeping there distance no having a laugh or conversation no more. It just seems every man or women to themselfs.. me personally am not afraid of catching it as i am young and healthy and i know i get through it but its who you pass it on to is the scary part. People who are old or a serious illness. I do think people and company’s have to stop thinking about money swallow there pride and shut everything down. If not there gonna be more people catching it everyday and unfortunately people dying
@Paul Atreides: And it is ordinary Irish people who will pay the highest price for the inept actions of FFG in not keeping this disease out of this small surrounded by water island,
People need to not look into daily figures unless there is a massive rise, yesterday and today’s figures is probably somewhat in the middle. We are in a pivotal place now and our destiny is literally in our own hands unlike many other European countries.
The Government need to step up and support very hard hit families!! The British government have just guaranteed 80% of an employees salary upto a maximum grant of £2,500 per month which is a far cry higher than €203 per week here and €300 per week odd if you actually have the virus… jobs are being lost by the thousands and the government expects people to survive on what is essentially what the current dole rate is.. absolutely shameful
@Jeffrey Corrigan: surprising as it might sound paying folks 80% of their previous salary, tax free I might add, is rather a lot of money. Money Britain could borrow, but we absolutely could not. Also you get the 203 euro if you are laid off…in Britain you only get the 80% salary if you remain working. But 203 euro is pretty stingy… In most cases that wouldn’t even cover rent.
By not isolating, you are effectively signing the death warrant of your granny, your Grandad and your Neighbour. You are completely reversing any efforts to contain the virus . Think about that.
@Vlad Eire: it’s assumed that Sars-nCov moved from bars to pangolins and from there to humans… Now first you’ll probably realise that pangolins are not known to eat bats. Yet the virus still spread, because as we know you don’t have to eat the infected to get infected….this is a pandemic…not a zombie apocalapse.. And more than that the bats have had it for millennia,before there were any people eating bats.
Pangolins are also not native to southern China…they were imported. The virus was in the pangolin population for likely the last few decades…perhaps as early as the 1950′s.
The image of the woman eating a bat…that was taken almost a decade ago, she wasn’t Chinese either, and the internet does not refuse type…. But it’s great for conspiracies.
I’m working in a factory at the moment and a lot of rules are still been broken and the other side alot are paranoid and there is a lack of comuncation over distance and paranoia. There is no talks or laughs no more over distance control.. been realiatic we all need to swallow our pride and just shut the whole country down. There is gonna be more deaths if we don’t
That’s my 2 cents. If Ireland will reach 15000 infected by 29th of March (according to Leo) that means that Ireland did not learned ANYTHING from China and Italy!
There are places still open that are too small to conduct the social distancing protocol. These places should be allowed or made to close due to health protection of the public.
On a separate note if both parents have to work and have a little one, where can a minder be found?
Why no lockdown? California, New York, lots of other parts of Europe are doing it. Just do it. Do it early (I know it is prob too late). Don’t wait for a disaster like Italy. The economy is already gone, so save people, save the health workers.
While it’s pretty obvious that PPE’s including masks, scrubs, hand sanitizer and even toilet are fast becoming a scarcity…. Well I’d suggest to Mr. Trump that red noses, frizzy hair wigs and outsized shoes are pretty much available.
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Use profiles to select personalised content 34 partners can use this purpose
Content presented to you on this service can be based on your content personalisation profiles, which can reflect your activity on this or other services (for instance, the forms you submit, content you look at), possible interests and personal aspects. This can for example be used to adapt the order in which content is shown to you, so that it is even easier for you to find (non-advertising) content that matches your interests.
Measure advertising performance 132 partners can use this purpose
Information regarding which advertising is presented to you and how you interact with it can be used to determine how well an advert has worked for you or other users and whether the goals of the advertising were reached. For instance, whether you saw an ad, whether you clicked on it, whether it led you to buy a product or visit a website, etc. This is very helpful to understand the relevance of advertising campaigns.
Measure content performance 60 partners can use this purpose
Information regarding which content is presented to you and how you interact with it can be used to determine whether the (non-advertising) content e.g. reached its intended audience and matched your interests. For instance, whether you read an article, watch a video, listen to a podcast or look at a product description, how long you spent on this service and the web pages you visit etc. This is very helpful to understand the relevance of (non-advertising) content that is shown to you.
Understand audiences through statistics or combinations of data from different sources 74 partners can use this purpose
Reports can be generated based on the combination of data sets (like user profiles, statistics, market research, analytics data) regarding your interactions and those of other users with advertising or (non-advertising) content to identify common characteristics (for instance, to determine which target audiences are more receptive to an ad campaign or to certain contents).
Develop and improve services 83 partners can use this purpose
Information about your activity on this service, such as your interaction with ads or content, can be very helpful to improve products and services and to build new products and services based on user interactions, the type of audience, etc. This specific purpose does not include the development or improvement of user profiles and identifiers.
Use limited data to select content 38 partners can use this purpose
Content presented to you on this service can be based on limited data, such as the website or app you are using, your non-precise location, your device type, or which content you are (or have been) interacting with (for example, to limit the number of times a video or an article is presented to you).
Use precise geolocation data 46 partners can use this special feature
With your acceptance, your precise location (within a radius of less than 500 metres) may be used in support of the purposes explained in this notice.
Actively scan device characteristics for identification 27 partners can use this special feature
With your acceptance, certain characteristics specific to your device might be requested and used to distinguish it from other devices (such as the installed fonts or plugins, the resolution of your screen) in support of the purposes explained in this notice.
Ensure security, prevent and detect fraud, and fix errors 90 partners can use this special purpose
Always Active
Your data can be used to monitor for and prevent unusual and possibly fraudulent activity (for example, regarding advertising, ad clicks by bots), and ensure systems and processes work properly and securely. It can also be used to correct any problems you, the publisher or the advertiser may encounter in the delivery of content and ads and in your interaction with them.
Deliver and present advertising and content 97 partners can use this special purpose
Always Active
Certain information (like an IP address or device capabilities) is used to ensure the technical compatibility of the content or advertising, and to facilitate the transmission of the content or ad to your device.
Match and combine data from other data sources 72 partners can use this feature
Always Active
Information about your activity on this service may be matched and combined with other information relating to you and originating from various sources (for instance your activity on a separate online service, your use of a loyalty card in-store, or your answers to a survey), in support of the purposes explained in this notice.
Link different devices 53 partners can use this feature
Always Active
In support of the purposes explained in this notice, your device might be considered as likely linked to other devices that belong to you or your household (for instance because you are logged in to the same service on both your phone and your computer, or because you may use the same Internet connection on both devices).
Identify devices based on information transmitted automatically 86 partners can use this feature
Always Active
Your device might be distinguished from other devices based on information it automatically sends when accessing the Internet (for instance, the IP address of your Internet connection or the type of browser you are using) in support of the purposes exposed in this notice.
Save and communicate privacy choices 68 partners can use this special purpose
Always Active
The choices you make regarding the purposes and entities listed in this notice are saved and made available to those entities in the form of digital signals (such as a string of characters). This is necessary in order to enable both this service and those entities to respect such choices.
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