Cookie Policy & Data Security | Lead Seeker

Learn about Lead Seeker's approach to data security and cookie management — Termly-managed compliance and robust controls for your privacy.

Last updated: July 9, 2026

Overview

Lead Seeker's cookie and data-security page explains that Termly manages cookie consent and publishes the live cookie inventory, links to the hosted Termly cookie policy, exposes a Manage cookie preferences control that opens Termly's preference center, and describes our TLS, encryption-at-rest, access-control, backup, vendor-review, and incident-response practices.

How Lead Seeker uses cookies, where to review the live cookie inventory, how to manage your consent, and how we secure the data you trust us with.

1. How we manage cookie consent

Lead Seeker uses Termly to manage cookie consent and to publish the live inventory of cookies set on this site. Termly automatically blocks non-essential third-party scripts and cookies in your browser until you grant consent in its banner, and it records and remembers your choice across visits.

2. Manage your preferences

You can review or change which non-essential cookies you allow at any time:

3. Data security

Encryption in transit. All traffic to the Service is served over TLS 1.2+.

Encryption at rest. Customer data is stored in encrypted volumes managed by our cloud provider.

Access controls. Production access is restricted to a minimal on-call group, gated by SSO and hardware-backed multi-factor authentication, and logged.

Backups. Daily backups with point-in-time recovery, tested on a regular cadence.

Vendor review. Sub-processors are reviewed for SOC 2 / ISO 27001 / equivalent before being onboarded.

Incident response. We will notify affected customers and authorities of material incidents as required by law.

4. Contact

Security or cookie questions? Email security@theleadseeker.com. For the broader picture of how we source data and honour data-subject rights, see Trust & Compliance.

This page is provided as informational boilerplate; it is not legal advice and does not replace a formal information-security policy.