back What does this site remember?

To make browsing comfortable, DACaps remembers a few small things about your visit — using so-called cookies (tiny notes the site asks your browser to keep). Only functional first-party cookies are used: no analytics, no advertising, no tracking, no third parties. Nothing is shared with anyone.

Cookies we set
Cookie What it is for Lifetime
dacaps_session Your session id. Everything the site remembers about your visit lives behind it (see the list below). 120 minutes
XSRF-TOKEN Security token that protects forms and requests against cross-site request forgery (CSRF). 120 minutes
no_cookies Set only if you click «Don't remember me» — remembers that you opted out. This is the single note kept in that case. Until revoked
What the session is used for
  • Trade wishlist — the caps you pick on the Trade page and the state of your trade request while it waits for e-mail confirmation.
  • Display settings — chosen view mode, hide mode, list size and menu states on cap lists.
  • Search by photo — the results shown on the photo search page after you use the camera button.
  • Security — the CSRF token above is stored in the session.

Cookies used for signing in exist only in the manager area for the site owners; public visitors never receive them.

If you don't want to be remembered

Click «Don't remember me» in the footer and the site stops storing anything: the notes above are deleted immediately and no new ones are made. You can change your mind any time with «Remember me» in the footer.

⚠ Without cookies these features stop working:
  • the trade wishlist — picked caps are forgotten and a trade request can't be sent;
  • search by photo — the camera button won't show its results;
  • display settings — view mode, hide mode and list size reset on every page.
The rest of the site works normally.

Right now: the site is not remembering you. Remember me



Not remembering you. Remember me   What do we remember?
I'm a Collector / It's my Collection    ver. 10.34c    |     Press F1 for help    |    Not remembering you. Remember me   What do we remember?