I don't have your data.
Not because of a policy. Because of how the app is built.
Here's how it actually works
Bleed
You log your period
Data is stored on your phone
There is no step 3.
Other period trackers
You log your period
Data is sent to their servers
Data is stored in their cloud
Data is shared with third parties
Data is sold to advertisers
Data is used to target you with ads
OK so what IS on my servers
If you sign up for the newsletter: your email address. If you leave a tip: the donation amount. That's it.
Your period data, your cycle history, your predictions, your notes — none of that ever leaves your phone. There is no account. There is no sync. There is no cloud.
After Roe
If someone comes to me with a warrant, I have nothing to hand over. Your period data is on your phone. I never had it. I never saw it. I couldn't hand it over if I wanted to.
This isn't a feature we added because of the political climate. This is how the app was built from day one.
Privacy isn't a setting you toggle. It's an architecture decision I made before writing the first line of code.
Most apps say “we won't.”
I'm saying: I can't.
“We won't sell your data” is a promise. Promises get broken when companies get acquired, when investors apply pressure, when boards change.
Bleed doesn't make that promise. Bleed doesn't need to. Your data is on your device. I physically cannot access it. That's not a policy — it's a fact.
Your data, your control
Export
Export your data anytime. CSV format. It's yours.
Delete
Delete everything with one tap. Gone. No ghost copies.
Backup
Back up to your own iCloud. Still never touches our servers.