This page exists because privacy text should be readable on a small screen, in daylight, without a law degree. If something here clashes with the way our software actually behaves, the software wins and we fix the words.
Who this is
FastApps LLC builds and maintains mobile applications. This policy describes what our apps and related services do with information—not what we wish sounded impressive in a pitch deck.
The short version
We do not run a marketplace for personal data. We do not ask our users to hand each other dossiers through our systems. The developer does not collect personal data in the sense of names, postal addresses, government identifiers, or contact books mined for sport.
What we may rely on, at most, is a pseudonymous identifier—think of it as a coat-check ticket number for your device—so analytics and push infrastructure can tell “this handset” from “that handset” without needing to know your full name.
Analytics: Singular
We use Singular to understand whether a flow in the app is accidentally sending people into a wall. That kind of insight is aggregated and tied to technical identifiers, not to a filing cabinet of individuals. If Singular processes data on our behalf, they do so as a service provider under arrangements consistent with their public documentation—worth reading if you enjoy terms as bedtime material.
Push notifications: OneSignal
We use OneSignal to deliver push messages when you opt in and when the app has something worth saying. Delivery requires a token or device-level identifier so the notification finds the right pocket. That is not the same as harvesting identity for resale; it is how pushes work on modern operating systems.
Conversational help: AI assistant
Some experiences include an AI assistant to answer questions or guide tasks. Interactions may be processed by automated systems so the assistant can respond. Do not treat the assistant as a lawyer, doctor, or oracle. Do not paste secrets you would not put on a postcard with a stamp.
User-to-user data
Users of our applications do not transmit personal data to one another through us as a conduit in the way a social network might. If a feature lets you share something, that is an intentional act between you and your chosen tools—not an open pipe where we collect what you share with friends.
What we still might touch without drama
- Diagnostics and crash logs that help us stop the app from quitting in protest.
- Technical metadata (app version, OS build) so we can reproduce bugs.
- Identifiers required by Apple and Google for push and attribution, used as industry-standard glue—not as a personality profile.
Children
Our products are not designed to profile children. If you believe we have accidentally collected something that should not be there, contact us and we will investigate with the enthusiasm of someone who hates paperwork.
Changes
When we change this policy, we update the date at the top. Continued use after a change means the new words apply. If the change is material, we will use reasonable in-app or surface-level notice where platform rules expect it.
Contact
Questions about privacy: [email protected]