Privacy Policy
Thank you for visiting our website.
We respect your privacy, and we aim to protect the personal information you provide to us. This Privacy Policy defines and regulates how Komarna d.o.o. uses and protects the information you provide when using this website. We protect your privacy. When you provide data by which you can be identified while using this website, you can be assured that it will be used by this Privacy Statement. Komarna d.o.o. may make changes to this statement and will update this page accordingly. You should check this page from time to time to ensure you agree with any changes and amendments.
By submitting data via contact forms on our website, which you have filled out, you agree to the use of your data by Article 5 NN 130/11 of the Personal Data Protection Act, as well as the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). Na ovim web stranicama mogu se prikupljati sljedeće informacije: ime i prezime, kontakt informacije, uključujući e-mail adresu, ostale podatke o pregledima i interesima te ostale nama relevantne podatke.
We may collect the following information on this website:
- Full name (only in contact forms) – used to contact website visitors
- Email address (only in contact forms) – used to contact website visitors
- IP address (browser cookies) – used for website traffic statistics
- Geolocation (browser cookies) – used for website traffic statistics
- Browser type (browser cookies) – used for website traffic statistics
- Device type (browser cookies) – used for website traffic statistics
We ensure your data is secure. We have implemented physical and electronic procedures to protect and safeguard the data we collect in order to prevent unauthorized access or disclosure of your information.
Komarna d.o.o. will not distribute your data to third parties unless we have your permission or are legally required to do so.
Komarna d.o.o. uses Google Analytics to measure website traffic. If you wish to prevent this service from saving cookies, you can disable it via the following link: Google Analytics – https://tools.google.com/dlpage/gaoptout
There are also several websites available for disabling cookies from various services. More information is available at: http://www.allaboutcookies.org i http://www.youronlinechoices.eu/
Your Rights
If you are concerned about your data, you have the right to request access to the personal information we hold or process about you. You have the right to request corrections of any inaccuracies. At any time, you may request that we stop using your information for direct marketing purposes. For any additional information, you may contact us or request the deletion of your data and comments.
National Legislation – All documents can be viewed on the official website of Narodne novine (Official Gazette of the Republic of Croatia):
- Constitution of the Republic of Croatia, Article 37 (“Narodne novine” 85/10 – consolidated text)
- Personal Data Protection Act (“Narodne novine” 106/12 – consolidated text)
- Personal Data Protection Act (“Narodne novine” 103/03)
- Act on Amendments to the Personal Data Protection Act (“Narodne novine” 118/06)
- Act on Amendments to the Personal Data Protection Act (“Narodne novine” 41/08)
- Act on Amendments to the Personal Data Protection Act (“Narodne novine” 130/11)
- Regulation on the manner of keeping and the template for records of personal data collections (“Narodne novine” 105/04)
- Regulation on the manner of storage and special technical protection measures for special categories of personal data (“Narodne novine” 139/04)
EU Regulations
Cookie Policy
The official name of the Directive is EU Directive 2009/136/EC, also known as the e-Privacy Directive. This Directive first entered European legislation two years ago, essentially representing a series of amendments to federal laws relating to electronic communications and data privacy. One part of this Directive, Article 5(3), relates to the use of stored data by websites and primarily concerns cookies. In essence, with this new EU law, all websites must obtain visitor consent before installing most cookies. The law, championed by European Commissioner Neelie Kroes, does not ban cookies but requires user consent before they are placed. Not all cookies are subject to these new rules – data essential for the basic functioning of a website, such as session cookies used to track shopping cart contents until checkout, do not require user consent.
What is the aim of this law?
The main goal is to give users more control over who knows what about them and how this information is used. As part of the broader Directive, it is an attempt to harmonize laws among EU member states regarding data retention and privacy. Lawmakers had strong reasons to believe that user tracking by websites was a significant issue that needed regulation. A recent study by Truste found that the typical UK website uses 14 different tracking tools, often without users’ knowledge. The same survey found that while 84% of online shoppers aged 16–64 are aware of internet cookies, only 24% are aware of the new European guidelines.
The Directive was first adopted in 2009, but its implementation by member states has been slow. Many countries have struggled to align this federal law with their privacy legislation. By the original implementation deadline of May 2011, only Denmark and Estonia had adopted national laws considered compliant with the new EU law. The Privacy Directive has been theoretically already in force across Europe since 25 May 2011; however, webmasters were given a one-year grace period to comply, meaning that from 26 May 2012, all websites were required to adhere to this law.
Who does this law apply to?
The law applies to all EU member states; however, even websites outside the EU must comply if their target audience is within EU member states. For example, a website based outside the EU that sells products to consumers in Germany, or that has a French-language version aimed at users in France, must comply with this law.














