
Commercial Funding Partners, LLC, Ward Financial Service Privacy Policy
Commercial Funding Partners, LLC (referred to as CFP)
Ward Financial Service (referred to as WFS) and its affiliates recognizes
the importance of keeping the personal information you provide to us
private and secure. CFP/WFS has developed a comprehensive privacy policy
and we use the latest technology to ensure that your personal information
is secure.
Privacy Statement
The personal, private information you provide to will only be used
in connection with processing, underwriting, funding, servicing, etc. the
loan for which you have applied. CFP/WFS will not share any information about
you or your company with any third party, except as necessary to process,
underwrite, fund, service, etc. the loan for which you have applied. CFP/WFS
does not share, distribute, sell or otherwise disseminate any information
about you or your company, except as detailed above.
Cookies
The purpose of this section is to explain how CFP/WFS protects and uses your
personal information when using this site. We want you to know that
information given to us is safe, secure and used in a responsible manner.
We designed features of our site to let new visitors anonymously learn
about our financial products and services without revealing their
identities. For these new visitors, the only information we collect online
is from cookies, pixel tags or similar devices, which provide limited
data, such as the date, time and areas of our site that were visited,
interactions on the site, and the Web path/domain where the visitor came
from. CFP/WFS uses this information only to recognize you and hold information
during your visit to the site. This general information allows us to serve
visitors better by continually improving our web site and making it more
convenient. Among other things, we may store the answers to the
eligibility questionnaire and control access to the loan application
section of the site. In certain cases, you can choose not to provide us
with the information, for example by setting your browser to refuse to
accept cookies, but if you do you may be unable to access certain portions
of the site. We may not be able to customize the site's features according
to your preferences.
Recent versions of most Internet browsers support the encrypted
transmission of on-line documents and the data you enter on a web page.
This means that instead of sending readable text, both your browser and
the web site's secure server encode all text using a security key. That
way, personal data sent to your browser or data you send back would be
extremely difficult to decode in the unlikely event it was intercepted by
an unauthorized party. The key used for encoding is a random number that
is unique to your session at the secure web site.
There are two grades of Internet security: International-grade encryption
uses a 40-bit random number negotiated between your browser and the
web-server. This means that only one out of about 1,000,000,000,000
possible decoding keys can be used to decipher your data. Domestic-grade
encryption uses a 128-bit key, so that the number of possible keys is
vastly larger. The CFP/WFS site uses the highest grade of encryption supported
by your browser and your Internet connection.
Your Internet session is encrypted if your security-enabled browser is
connected to a web site using the Secure Hypertext Transport Protocol. URL
strings beginning with "HTTPS://" instead of the usual "HTTP://" indicate
that the secure protocol is in effect. Your browser may also tell you if
security is operating. For example, Netscape Navigator may display the
icon in the lower left corner of your screen in secure mode. If 128-bit
security is in effect, it shows the icon. Microsoft Internet Explorer
shows an icon in either case. Note that security may be operating without
any visible indication if the web page you are viewing employs frames (see
below).
If secure transmission is not in effect or only part of a frame-based page
is secure, Netscape shows the "broken key" icon, and Explorer does not
show the "lock" icon.
Most browsers can be set to give you a pop-up announcement when you enter
or leave a secure web page. In Netscape, these settings are on the
Security Preferences "General" tab. In IE, the setting is on the
"Advanced" tab when you select "Options" on the View menu.
Security may be operating without displaying any security icons (or
Netscape may show the "broken key" icon) if only part of a frame-based
page is employing security. You can verify the security of page within a
frame by opening it in a new browser window. Both IE and Netscape allow
you to open a link in a new window by right-clicking on the link and
selecting that option from the pop-up context menu. When a secure page is
open in its own window, instead of being viewed within a frame, you can
then see the security icons provided by your browser as well as the
"https://" secure protocol prefix in the URL string.
Links
At certain places on this site, live "links" to other Internet
addresses can be accessed ("Linked Sites"). Such Linked Sites contain
information created, published, maintained, or otherwise posted by
institutions or organizations independent of CFP/WFS. CFP/WFS does not endorse,
approve, certify or control these Linked Sites and does not guarantee the
accuracy, completeness, efficacy, timeliness or correct sequencing of
information that they contain. CFP/WFS Privacy Policy does not apply to these
Linked Sites. The privacy policies of these Linked Sites may differ from CFP's/WFS's, and you should review their polices before accessing them and/or
submitting information.
Changes to the Privacy Policy
CFP/WFS reserves the right to change its Privacy Policy at any time.