TwinMind is built with privacy-first, so you always stay in control. Here’s the full picture in one place:
Mode | What happens | Ideal for |
Offline Mode (default) | - No raw audio recorded or stored. | Maximum privacy and/or confidential meetings. |
Optional Cloud Backup | - End-to-end–encrypted sync of transcripts & chats so you can switch between iOS, desktop sidebar, or Chrome extension. | Device switching, lost-phone recovery, multi-platform access (syncing memories between chrome extension and app), and access to 100+ languages and better transcription models. |
No “hot mic” recordings
We never keep raw audio; it’s streamed into the on-device model, converted to text, then immediately discarded.
30-second rolling deletion
The temporary audio buffer self-erases every half-minute, so nothing accumulates in memory.
Anonymized transcripts
The text doesn’t identify who said what line, making it useless as legal evidence or for academic-misconduct accusations.
Full user control
Delete any memory or keep only the AI-generated summary with one tap.
Toggle cloud backup or go 100 % local at any moment.
Never sold or shared
We don’t monetize or hand your data to third parties—period.
Ask first: Laws differ, so we encourage users to get verbal consent before capturing meetings or study sessions.
Respect policies: If a course bans AI tools during exams, switch TwinMind off or stick to Offline Mode summaries only.
TwinMind: No raw-audio storage, 30-sec purge, optional encrypted cloud text.
Typical AI pendants (Limitless, Plaud, etc.): Often record and store entire audio files in the cloud.
Phones you already carry: Siri/Google Assistant continuously listen for wake-words without saving audio—TwinMind follows a similar “on-device-only” philosophy.
Question | Answer |
Can I erase everything? | Yes—delete individual memories or wipe all data anytime. |
Will TwinMind share my info? | No. We never sell or share user data. |
What if I change my mind about cloud backup? | Toggle it off; your data is removed from the cloud. |
Could transcripts be used against me in class? | They lack speaker attribution and can be edited, so they aren’t admissible proof. |