Local-first storage
All app data — your focus areas, goals, tasks, notes, journal, bookmarks, portfolio — lives in a folder on your Mac. Anjadhe has no server that stores or processes your content.
Privacy by design
Anjadhe sees your calendar, your email, your goals, and the things you write to yourself. That only works if privacy is a property of the architecture, not a promise on a page. Here is what that means in practice.
All app data — your focus areas, goals, tasks, notes, journal, bookmarks, portfolio — lives in a folder on your Mac. Anjadhe has no server that stores or processes your content.
Gmail and Google Calendar are opt-in integrations you enable from Settings. Anjadhe works fully as a standalone productivity tool with no account connected.
Multi-device sync writes encrypted change files to your own iCloud Drive using an AES-256-GCM key kept on your Mac. Nothing flows through our servers, and we can’t read it.
There is no Anjadhe login or cloud profile. If you opt in to anonymous usage signals, you can see exactly what would be sent — just event counts, never message bodies, notes, or any of your content.
Connected mailboxes are read directly from Google on each Mac. Message bodies are never written into the sync journal or copied anywhere we control.
Disconnect a Google account, revoke access from your Google Account, uninstall the app, or delete the sync folder — every piece of your data is reversible from your side.
On-device intelligence
Anjadhe's AI runs on open-weight models like Gemma and Qwen — private by default, with nothing you ask and nothing the assistant sees leaving your Mac. Want more power? Run the model on a server you own, or bring your own OpenAI or Anthropic API key. The brain runs only on servers and services you choose — never a cloud Anjadhe picked for you, and nothing is trained on your data.
It sees your data, acts on your email and calendar, browses the web, and even builds you new apps — one assistant, not a drawer of disconnected bots.
Open-weight models on this Mac by default, or your own OpenAI-compatible server. Want frontier capability? Add an OpenAI or Anthropic model with your own API key — an explicit, per-model choice, never a fallback. Nothing is trained on your data, and nothing goes anywhere you didn’t point it.
The details
On your Mac, inside a folder that macOS sets aside for app data (~/Library/Application Support/anjadhe-app). Everything you create in Anjadhe — notes, goals, journal entries, schedule items, portfolio records — lives there. If you uninstall the app and delete that folder, the data is gone from that machine.
Each machine writes encrypted per-key change files to a folder in your iCloud Drive. Your other Macs pick the changes up when the app launches. The encryption key sits next to the folder on your machine, and the whole stream is AES-256-GCM. We have no copy of either the key or the data.
If you connect Gmail, the app reads messages directly from Google on each Mac and shows them in the Email view. Priority messages can be analysed by a local AI running on your Mac to extract action items. Message bodies are never written into the sync journal — Gmail stays at its source, and each machine fetches independently.
If you connect Calendar, the app reads your events to show them alongside your tasks. When you create or edit an event from inside Anjadhe, the change is written back to Google Calendar. No event data is sent anywhere else.
Not unless you turn it on. Analytics are opt-in from Settings, off by default. When enabled, Anjadhe records anonymous event counts — like “email view opened” or “assistant response marked helpful” — attached only to a random install ID. Your message bodies, notes, goals, and everything else you write stay on your Mac. Settings has a “view what would be sent” panel so you can inspect the data yourself before the app ever transmits anything.
Disconnect any Google accounts from Settings, revoke access at myaccount.google.com/permissions, uninstall the app, and delete ~/Library/Application Support/anjadhe-app. If you used sync, also delete ~/.anjadhe_sync in iCloud Drive. That removes every local trace of Anjadhe.
The formal privacy policy covers the specific OAuth scopes, retention, third-party obligations, and Google API Limited Use compliance.
Read the privacy policy →A private, personal AI assistant that lives with your data — running on your Mac by default, and only ever on servers and services you trust.
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