Privacy Policy
Last updated: March 2026
The short version
We're not interested in your data. We collect the bare minimum to make scheduling work, and we don't sell, share, or do anything creepy with it.
What we collect
- Account info — your name, email, and password (hashed, we can't read it) so you can log in
- Booking data — meeting titles, times, and visitor details so the scheduling actually works
- Calendar connections — OAuth tokens to check your availability. We only read free/busy status and create events you ask us to
What we don't do
- We don't sell your data. Ever.
- We don't show you ads.
- We don't track you across the web.
- We don't read the contents of your calendar events — just whether you're busy or free.
- We don't share your information with third parties, except the services below that are needed to run things.
Services we use
- Google Calendar API — if you connect your Google Calendar, to check availability and create events
- Microsoft Graph API — same thing, for Outlook calendars
- Resend — to send booking confirmation and cancellation emails
That's the complete list. No analytics platforms, no ad networks, no data brokers.
Cookies
We use a single session cookie to keep you logged in. No tracking cookies, no third-party cookies, no cookie banner needed.
Where your data lives
Your data is stored in a PostgreSQL database on our own server. It's not spread across a dozen cloud services.
Deleting your data
Delete your account and everything goes with it — your profile, booking types, bookings, calendar connections, API keys, all of it. No 90-day retention, no "we keep anonymized data" games.
Visitor data
When someone books time with you, we store their name, email, and any notes they add. This data belongs to the booking and is visible to you (the host). We don't create accounts for visitors or contact them for any reason other than booking confirmations and cancellations.
Changes
If we change this policy, we'll update this page. We won't make it worse.
Questions?
If anything here is unclear, just ask. We wrote this to be read by humans, not lawyers.