Your Privacy Choices on Top Circular BD
Table of Contents
You’re in Control Here
Top Circular BD exists to help people in Bangladesh find jobs, track education updates, and stay on top of career opportunities. To do that well, we use tools like cookies, analytics, and ad systems. Some of those tools collect data about how you use the site.
Not everyone is fine with that, and that’s completely reasonable. This page lays out exactly what we collect, why, and how you can turn any of it off. No legal maze. No buried settings. Just a straight explanation of your options.
What “Opting Out” Actually Means
Opting out means you tell us to stop using certain types of data collection, specifically the kind used for analytics and ads. A few things worth knowing upfront:
Some cookies cannot be turned off. These are the ones that keep the site running at all — things like page navigation, login sessions, and basic security. Without them, the site breaks. Everything else is fair game.
If you opt out of analytics, we lose visibility into how you’re using the site. That’s fine. It just means we have less data to work with when improving things. If you opt out of advertising cookies, you’ll still see ads, they just won’t be tailored to you. Random ads instead of relevant ones.
Opting out here also doesn’t stop Google or Facebook from tracking you across other sites. Those companies run their own systems. We’ll point you to their opt-out tools as well, but we don’t control them.
The Three Types of Tracking We Use
Essential Cookies
These run in the background every time you visit. They handle page loading, protect against basic fraud, and remember your session. You can’t turn them off through our settings because they’re not optional — the site genuinely can’t function without them.
Analytics Cookies
We use Google Analytics to understand how people move through the site: which pages get the most visits, how long people stay, what devices they’re using. The data is aggregated. We’re not building profiles on individual users. We’re trying to figure out whether a particular page is confusing people or whether our mobile layout is broken.
If you don’t want your browsing to contribute to that data, you can opt out. Explained below.
Advertising Cookies
We run ads through Google AdSense and other networks. These cookies watch what you’ve browsed and show you ads that are more likely to be relevant. If you’ve been looking at government job circulars, the ads might push similar opportunities. If you opt out, Google falls back on context alone and just shows whatever fits the page topic, not your specific interests.
How to Actually Opt Out
Through Our Cookie Banner
The first time you visit the site, a cookie consent banner appears. You can accept everything, reject non-essential cookies, or customize. If you clicked through too fast and want to change your mind, clear your browser cookies. The banner will reappear on your next visit.
Through Your Browser
Every major browser lets you block or delete cookies:
Chrome: Settings > Privacy and Security > Cookies and other site data
Firefox: Settings > Privacy & Security > Cookies and Site Data
Edge: Settings > Cookies and site permissions
Blocking all cookies is the nuclear option. It works, but some parts of websites stop functioning properly, including on sites unrelated to ours.
Through Google Directly
Google runs the ads you see across most of the internet, including here. You can control how they target you at adssettings.google.com. Log in with your Google account, turn off personalized ads, review what interests Google has assigned you, and delete any you didn’t ask for.
This change applies across every site that uses Google ads, not just ours.
Through Industry Opt-Out Tools
Two organizations let you opt out of targeted advertising from dozens of networks at once:
Network Advertising Initiative (NAI): optout.networkadvertising.org
Digital Advertising Alliance (DAA): optout.aboutads.info
These tools don’t cover every ad network in existence, but they cover most of the major ones. Worth doing if you want broad coverage.
On Your Phone or Tablet
Browser settings help on desktop. On mobile, the controls sit at the operating system level.
Android: Go to Settings > Privacy > Ads. You can reset your advertising ID or opt out of ad personalization entirely.
iOS: Go to Settings > Privacy & Security > Tracking. Turn on “Ask App Not to Track.” Apps are supposed to respect this. Most do.
These settings limit how apps and mobile browsers track you across platforms, not just on our site.
Third Parties We Don’t Control
Some tools embedded in our site belong to other companies. Google Analytics, Google Ads, and any social sharing buttons fall into this category. We use them, but we don’t set their rules. Each company has its own data policies and its own opt-out process.
If you want complete transparency, read the privacy policies for Google and any other platform you interact with. We’re not trying to pass the buck. We’re just telling you that our opt-out settings only cover what we control.
What Changes If You Opt Out
You can still access every article, job circular, and resource on the site. Opting out doesn’t lock you out of anything. The differences are narrower:
Ads become less relevant. Job recommendations may not match your browsing patterns. In rare cases, a page feature that relies on cookies might not behave as expected.
That’s the full list of consequences. Nothing dramatic.
Updating Your Preferences Later
Your opt-out choices aren’t locked in forever. Clear your browser cookies and the consent banner reappears. Go back to your browser settings and adjust anytime. Visit adssettings.google.com whenever you want to revisit your Google preferences.
You set your preferences, and you can change them whenever you feel like it.
Your Rights
Depending on where you are, you may have formal rights over your data: the right to see what we’ve collected, to request corrections, to ask us to delete it, or to withdraw your consent at any time. We take those rights seriously. If you want to exercise any of them, reach out.
Contact
If something on this page is confusing, or you need help working through any of the opt-out steps, email us:
We read these and respond. If your settings aren’t working the way they should, we want to know.
Last updated: March 2026
