The vault
Everything the room knows, and nothing it does not.
Every number below is counted from what six people actually put in this room. There is nothing inferred, nothing bought, and nothing scraped.
- 6
- 153
- 8
- 8
- 141
- 85
- 4
- 0
Every frame carries a name.
Forever, and in the printed book. If somebody leaves this room, they take their contributions with them, and the book is recompiled without them. That is not a setting, it is how the compiler works.
- MIMiraMira37 memories
- KEKeiKei49 memories
- TOTomásTomás27 memories
- AYAylaAyla29 memories
- DEDevDev16 memories
- WRWrenWren7 memories
Held back
4 memories in this room are hidden from Ayla.
They are the photographs of a party the rest of the room is planning. The people they are hidden from can see that they exist, and cannot open them, and will get a book that includes them on a date that has already been set.
Every real group needs this and nobody builds it. A memory product that cannot keep a secret is a memory product that people quietly stop putting the good things in.
The three lines.
- Your memories train your room. They do not train a public model.
- We do not run face recognition. Not on by default, not as an option, not at all.
- Every frame carries the name of the person who gave it, forever.
These are constants in lib/config.ts, not copy on a page. If one of them stops being true, somebody has to delete it from the source first, and that shows up in a diff.
What we will not build.
Face recognition
We do not detect, group, or name a single face, and there is no setting to turn on. The room finds people through who gave it what, and through what people said out loud. It is a worse algorithm and a better product.
Advertising, and selling anything about you
There is no ad model, so there is nothing here that wants your attention longer than it takes to finish the book. You pay for the room. That is the whole business.
Training a general model on your memories
Your marks train your room. Nothing leaves it. A room that has learned that Kei keeps the blurry ones has learned it about Kei, and it stays with Kei.
Inventing a caption
A polished sentence nobody said, printed on paper and posted to somebody's mother, is a false memory. Every caption in every book is a sentence a person in this room actually wrote.
The door is not locked.
Take everything: the originals at full resolution, the notes, the voice recordings, the marks, and the recipe that rebuilds every book. It is a folder and a JSON file, and it is yours, and you do not have to ask us for it.