Cookies & GDPR

Last updated: 16 May 2026

This page explains how PowerAI Labs uses cookies and similar technologies, and how visitors in the EU/EEA and UK can exercise their rights under the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).

What is a cookie?

A cookie is a small text file stored on your device when you visit a website. Cookies allow the Site to remember your preferences, keep you signed in, measure traffic, and improve content.

Cookies we use

  • Strictly necessary — set by WordPress.com to deliver pages, authenticate logged-in users, and remember comment author details.
  • Functional — store preferences such as accepted cookie notices.
  • Analytics — Jetpack Stats / WordPress.com Stats record aggregate, anonymised visit data so we can understand which posts are useful.
  • Security — Jetpack helps detect malicious traffic and brute-force login attempts.

We do not use advertising cookies, retargeting pixels, or sell visitor data.

Managing cookies

You can accept or reject non-essential cookies via the cookie banner shown on your first visit. You can also clear or block cookies in your browser settings — note that strictly necessary cookies are required for the Site to work correctly.

Your GDPR rights

If you are located in the EU/EEA or UK, you have the following rights regarding personal data we process:

  • Right of access — request a copy of the data we hold about you.
  • Right to rectification — ask us to correct inaccurate or incomplete data.
  • Right to erasure (“right to be forgotten”) — request deletion of your data where applicable.
  • Right to restrict or object to processing.
  • Right to data portability in a machine-readable format.
  • Right to withdraw consent at any time, where consent is the basis for processing.

To exercise any of these rights, email contact@powerailabs.dev. We will respond within 30 days.

Data controller

For the purposes of GDPR, the data controller is Raghav Mishra, operating PowerAI Labs from Denmark. WordPress.com (Automattic Inc.) acts as a data processor on our behalf.

Supervisory authority

If you believe your data has been mishandled, you can lodge a complaint with the Danish Data Protection Agency — Datatilsynet.