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Privacy Notice

The concept of online privacy includes the right to decide what personal information you choose to submit online, and how that information will be used, if at all. To protect user privacy, HUD User follows Office of Management and Budget (OMB) recommendations and other suggestions regarding Internet privacy policy for Federal Government Web sites. In doing so, we strive to make users aware of the kinds of information we collect from them, explaining why we collect that information, how we use it, and whether it will be shared with others.

Information Collected Automatically
When users surf the HUD User Web site or associated Web sites, HUD User collects the following data for statistical purposes only:

  • the IP address from which users access our Web site;
  • the date and time of their visits;
  • the URLs of the pages that they view;
  • WAIS searches and retrievals, including search terms.

We use these statistics to make improvements to HUD User and related Web sites, not to identify individual users or their searches. We do not enable cookies to monitor usage or to gather users' personal information.

Information Collected via Correspondence with HUD User
Personal information submitted by a user in comments or questions via phone, fax, or e-mail is not distributed to parties outside of HUD User. Identifying information, such as name, e-mail address, and phone or fax number, is used only for responding to users' comments or questions, and is not made available for other purposes.

Information Collected via HUD User Web Store
Personal information supplied by a user when submitting an order via HUD User, phone, fax, or e-mail is used for fulfilling that order. This information may be used to notify customers of new products that may be of interest to them.

Information submitted through an order placed on the HUD User Web store is protected by the use of commercial encryption software. By using this software to create a secure environment for online information exchange, HUD User ensures that only authorized personnel can view personal information, such as credit card numbers.

HUD User does not enable cookies to monitor usage or to gather users' personal information; however, "session cookies" are used to aid in the selection of items on the HUD User Web store. To take full advantage of the shopping cart features on the HUD User Web store, users must have session cookies enabled on their browser. Session cookies disappear from the user's computer when an Internet session ends.

Definitions of Privacy Terms

  • Cookies: Cookies are small pieces of information that Web servers or pages store on a user's hard drive. There are two types of cookies: session cookies and persistent cookies. Both types of cookies allow Internet servers to "remember" specific information about a user. Web sites use them primarily to personalize their sites for individual users, to keep track of orders when users purchase products, and to target advertising toward users based on the information that they access. However, session cookies will "remember" that information for only as long as you explore a Web site during one "session", or visit to the Web site. Session cookies will not "remember" information about you when you return to the site for subsequent visits. However, persistent cookies will "remember" this information for more than one session. OMB has decided that persistent cookies should not be allowed on Government Web sites, except in "the most unusual of circumstances." HDU USER currently follows this recommendation.
  • Encryption: Encryption technology ensures the protection of personal information via private, secure transactions.HUD User now features an encryption service that ensures private, secure transactions for customers who submit electronic orders by credit card through the Web store.  This technology is provided by Verisign, the leading provider of Internet-based trust services and digital certificate solutions used by Web sites, electronic-commerce service providers, and individuals to conduct trusted and secure electronic commerce and communications over IP networks.

Security

Site security is the concept of monitoring network traffic to identify unauthorized attempts to upload or change information on HUD User's servers. In the case that suspicious activity of this sort arises, a user's personal information may be tracked to identify a possible threat. This is the only reason that HUD User will ever collect personal information and/or monitor user activity without asking permission or giving prior notice.

1 x Pre-Purchase Counseling Outcome Study: Research Brief1 x 2011 Housing Profile: Indianapolis - Carmel, IN - American Housing Survey Fact Sheets1 x Accessory Dwelling Units: Case Study1 x Evidence Matters Factory-Built Housing (Winter/Spring 2020)1 x American Housing Survey Metro Book, 1995, Kansas City1 x A Picture of Subsidized Households in 1997: United States: Totals & Agencies with over 500 Units1 x 2004 GSE Single Family Census Tract Files By MSA1 x 2003 National GSE Single-Family and Multifamily Data Set(s) on CD-ROM1 x American Housing Survey Metro Book, 1995, New York Nassau/Suffolk1 x 2007 American Housing Survey - Data Chart1 x American Housing Survey for Selected Metropolitan Areas: Houston, 19981 x Assessment of the Availability and Cost of Financing for Small Multifamily Properties1 x Metropolitan Area FactSheets - May 2013: Virginia Beach - Norfolk - Newport News, VA1 x American Housing Survey for Selected Metropolitan Areas: San Francisco, 19981 x American Housing Survey for the PITTSBURGH Metropolitan Area: 20041 x American Housing Survey Metro Book, 1993, Minneapolis­St. Paul1 x Subsidized Housing Projects' Geographic Codes, Form HUD-951 (CD-ROM), 1996 *1 x Rehabilitation Guidelines 1980: No. 1. Setting and Adopting Standards for Building Rehabilitation1 x 2011 Housing Profile: Kansas City, MO - KS - American Housing Survey Fact Sheets1 x Metropolitan Area FactSheets - May 2013: Oakland - Fremont - Hayward, CA1 x Technology Scanning1 x The Impacts of Supportive Housing on Neighborhoods and Neighbors1 x The Applicability of Housing First Models to Homeless Persons with Serious Mental Illness1 x The Power of Partnership1 x The Impact of CDBG Spending on Urban Neighborhoods