Privacy by design: how Weasley handles your data
AI assistants need context to be useful. That means they hold information about you — your projects, preferences, connected accounts, and conversation history. The question isn’t whether an assistant stores data. It’s who owns it, who can access it, and what happens when you leave.
We designed Weasley around a simple principle: your life is not training data.
What we store
To work well, Weasley keeps:
- Conversation history — so you can pick up where you left off
- Preferences and profile — tone, format, standing instructions
- Connected tool metadata — enough to act on your calendar, inbox, or notes (not full dumps of unrelated data)
- Documents you explicitly share — for summarization, drafting, or reference
We store what makes the product work. We don’t hoover up everything we can reach.
What we don’t do
- No training public models on your chats. Your conversations stay in your account.
- No selling data to brokers or advertisers. We make money when you pay for Weasley, not when we sell your context.
- No shadow profiles. We don’t stitch your Weasley data with third-party data brokers to “personalize” ads.
Security basics
- Data is encrypted in transit and at rest
- Access is restricted to systems that need it to run the service — not a free-for-all for employees
- We audit access and log sensitive operations
We’re not going to claim “unhackable.” No one serious does. We are going to claim that we take this seriously and improve continuously.
Your controls
In your settings dashboard you can:
- Export your data in a portable format
- Delete individual conversations or your entire account
- Disconnect integrations at any time
- Review what context Weasley is using for a given answer
If you leave, your data goes with you — or disappears, if that’s what you want.
Transparency over trust-us bro
Privacy policies shouldn’t require a law degree. If something about how we handle your data isn’t clear, reach out — and we’ll update our docs until it is.
Useful AI and strong privacy aren’t opposites. They’re prerequisites for an assistant you can actually rely on.