Cookies. We Don't Use Them. Here's Why You Should Care.

Cookies are small files websites drop onto your computer to track what you do, where you go, and what you're interested in buying. Most websites use them. We don't.

Here's what they actually do with that information:

A company tried to sell us customer research recently. Not generic market data — specific people. They knew which government offices had started searching for night vision equipment. They knew who ran those offices. They had names, work emails, and in at least one case, a personal AOL email address that had nothing to do with any government system.

Think about that for a second.

A bureaucrat sitting in a federal building, using a government computer, doing what they thought was quiet research — and a data broker had already connected the dots back to their personal inbox. The one they've had since 2003. The one they use for their fantasy football league.

If cookies can do that to someone with a security clearance and an IT department, imagine what they know about you.

We sell to people who value privacy. Military. Law enforcement. Government agencies. Serious civilians who understand that what you buy says a lot about who you are and what you're doing. None of those people need their purchasing intentions broadcast to anyone willing to pay for a data subscription.

So we don't use cookies.
Not the tracking kind. Not the "anonymous analytics" kind that aren't actually anonymous. Not any of them.

You came here to look at night vision. That's between you and us.

That's where it stays.