Privacy

Benefito Inc. knows that you care how information about you is used and shared, and we appreciate your trust. We do NOT sell or rent your personal information to third parties for their marketing purposes without your explicit consent. Please read this privacy policy to learn more about the ways in which we use and protect your personal information. This notice describes our privacy policy. By visiting FactPark.com, you are accepting the practices described in this Privacy Notice.

Conditions of Use, Notices, and Revisions

If you choose to visit FactPark.com, your visit and any dispute over privacy is subject to this Notice and our User Agreement, including limitations on damages, arbitration of disputes, and application of the law of the state of Pennsylvania. If you have any concern about privacy at FactPark.com, please send us a thorough description through feedback, and we will try to resolve it.

Our business changes constantly, and our Privacy Notice and the User Agreement will change constantly also. You should check our Web site frequently to see recent changes. Unless stated otherwise, our current Privacy Notice applies to all information that we have about you and your account. We stand behind the promises we make, however, and will never materially change our policies and practices to make them less protective of customer information collected in the past without the consent of affected customers.

We use Google,  a third party vendor, to serve ads when you visit our website. Google may use information (not including your name, address, email address, or telephone number) about your visits to this and other websites in order to provide advertisements about goods and services of interest to you. If you would like more information about this practice and to know your choices about not having this information used by Google, click here.

Write to us at benefitoinc@gmail.com if you have questions.

Recently Added Facts

Did you know that despite the fact that hunters love hunting deer during the hunting seasons.

Everyone's tongue print is different. Odd facts and funny facts about people.

Human brain is more active when you're asleep. While the rest of our body is more active during the day.

Why do people go to college? Or why do Americans go to college?

Do you know who invented the electric chair? Not a scientist. But a dentist! Imagine who got to use it the first time.

It's certain that women have got bigger over the past two decades. It shows on their bra size.

Odd fact: right handed people live longer than left handed people

Average human brain is only two percent of our body weight. However, it uses 20 percent of the blood and 20 percent of our body’s oxygen.

strange facts about shrimps. A shrimp's heart is in its head.

Most fruits are categorized in a way that it's surprising to people. How is a pineapple categorized? To most people's surprises, a pineapple is a berry.

Random Facts

The name Santa Claus came from Saint Nicholas who was a bishop in the town of Myra.

In 1919, the Russian transplant pioneer Serge Voronoff successfully grafted monkey testicles onto human males. Share odd facts on FactPark.com.

Zebras' unpredictable nature and tendency to attack preclude them from being good candidates for domestication.

It is physically impossible for pigs to look up into the sky.

One of the first roller coasters was in France in 1817 - Les Montagnes Russes à Belleville (Russian Mountains of Belleville) - the train axle was attached to the track by way of a carved groove.

During the 19th century, Salem, Massachusetts played an important role in the world pepper trade and made some of America's first millionaires.

The first published English novel was writtn by Thomas Malory, Le Morte d'Arthur, (written in 1470 and published 1485).

How did the grapefruit get its name? It doesn't look like a grape. It is believed that the name refers to the manner in which grapefruit grows in clusters on a tree.

Captured in Thailand in 1919, the harmless whale shark holds the title of largest fish, with the record of 59 feet.

If a statue in the park of a person on a horse has both front legs in the air, the person died in battle.

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