Privacy Policy
Kompresio is designed around local browser processing. This policy explains the practical boundaries for files, metadata, analytics, retention, and future cloud processing.
Current MVP promise
Core image workflows stay on your device.
Browser-first image processing
For MVP tools, compression, WebP and AVIF conversion, resize, crop, metadata cleaning, image analysis, image-to-PDF, preview, and ZIP export run in your browser. The file does not need to be uploaded to a Kompresio server for these workflows.
Image content is not analytics data
Kompresio should not track image pixels, image previews, personal metadata, or full private filenames in analytics. Product analytics, if enabled, should focus on anonymous workflow events such as tool_opened, file_added, conversion_completed, pdf_created, or zip_downloaded.
Metadata and privacy tools
Metadata Cleaner and Image Analyzer may read EXIF-like fields in the browser to show camera, software, orientation, and location-related signals. Cleaning exports a fresh re-encoded image so common hidden metadata is removed from the downloaded file.
Temporary browser memory
Preview URLs, canvas output, PDF blobs, JSON reports, and ZIP files are temporary browser objects. Closing the tab, clearing the queue, or refreshing the page removes the active in-memory session from the app UI.
Optional future cloud processing
Advanced future features such as API processing, very large batches, shared workspaces, or cloud storage should require explicit consent, clear upload status, short retention windows, and separate account or billing terms.
Retention expectation
For the browser-first MVP, Kompresio does not need to retain user images. If server-side workflows are added later, retention periods and deletion controls should be documented before users upload files.
Data boundaries
What Kompresio should not do
These guardrails are part of the product design and should stay visible as advanced workflows are added.
Do not collect raw image content for product analytics.
Do not store private image metadata without explicit consent.
Do not use uploaded images for model training or marketing samples without permission.
Do not expose filenames, EXIF fields, or preview data in logs intended for analytics.