Your Data. Your Rules.
No ads, no tracking, no selling your data. Here are the specifics.
We show our work, including on privacy.
What most apps do: Reference vague categories of "service providers" and "third-party partners" without naming who actually touches your data. You're trusting unnamed companies with your location, health data, and workout history.
What we do: Our privacy policy sets out what we collect, why, and who we share it with. Our email server is self-hosted. If you're trusting software with your body, you should be able to find out where your data goes.
Your workouts aren't ad inventory.
What most apps do: Participate in advertising ecosystems that track you across websites and apps. Tracking pixels, Google Analytics, Facebook Pixel, and ad networks all feed your fitness habits into systems designed to sell you things. Some apps deliver third-party ads directly into the experience, giving advertisers your IP address automatically.
What we do: Zero analytics trackers. Zero advertising pixels. Zero ad partners. No behavioral profiling. There are no ads in Pacewright. Our revenue comes from subscriptions, period.
"We don't sell your data" should mean something.
What most apps do: Claim they "don't sell your data" while sharing it broadly with advertising partners, using it for behavioral profiling, or granting themselves perpetual licenses to commercialize it. Some apps sell "de-identified, aggregate data" to unnamed third parties. Others process your personal information "on behalf of and according to the instructions of" their advertising partners. Their definition of "sell" is narrow enough to permit most of this.
What we do: Our commitment is backed by architecture, not just language. We don't collect behavioral data. We don't have advertising partners. We don't grant ourselves rights to commercialize your content. There's nothing to sell because we don't collect it. Our privacy policy states it plainly: "We do not and will not ever profit from user data."
Your training data trains you, not our AI.
What most apps do: Use your workout data for machine learning: route suggestions, performance analysis, "personalized guidance." Some offer opt-out (not opt-in). Others grant themselves a "worldwide, perpetual, sub-licensable right to access, use, commercialize" everything you submit. When it comes to AI training on your fitness data, most apps either do it quietly, bury the opt-out, or claim rights so broad they don't need to ask.
What we do: "Your data is never used to train artificial intelligence or machine learning models." Full stop. Pacewright's algorithm adapts to your performance using your data on your account. It doesn't feed a collective model. We don't claim any rights to your content.
Auto-renewal taxes inattention. We don't.
What most apps do: Auto-renew by default. If you forget to cancel at least 24 hours before renewal, you're charged. Some offer no refunds whatsoever ("paid memberships always run their term"). This is the industry standard, and it's designed to profit from inattention.
What we do: Pacewright refuses auto-renewal on principle. When your subscription period ends, you choose whether to renew. We send reminders at 14 days, 3 days, and the day of expiration, each with a "Do Not Remind Me Again" option. If you don't renew, your account reverts to the free tier. Your data stays intact.
Your data should actually be yours.
What most apps do: One app charges a fee just to access your own data. Another can delete your account through inactivity, with no warning and no recovery. Some grant themselves "perpetual, irrevocable, worldwide" licenses to commercialize everything you submit, including the right to sublicense it to others. And when you delete your account, some content may "remain visible" indefinitely.
What we do: Free, one-click data export in JSON and CSV, available to all tiers, anytime. Account deletion includes a 7-day grace period or immediate deletion with multi-step confirmation. When we say deleted, we mean deleted. We never claim rights to your training data, workout logs, or any content you create.
Privacy should be the default, not a setting you have to find.
What most apps do: Some make your name, location, gender, activity, and profile picture public by default. Others have been through multiple corporate acquisitions, each one transferring all user data to new owners with new privacy policies. When a company gets acquired, your data goes with it. Some apps are owned by entities in countries with different data protection standards, and don't disclose that on their main website.
What we do: Ghost Mode is on by default, so all sharing is opt-in. Pacewright is self-funded by a disabled veteran, with no investors and no acquisition risk. Your data won't end up at a company you never signed up for. We're a Pennsylvania LLC, and we tell you exactly where your data is stored.
Read the full policy.
Everything on this page is backed by our privacy policy, not just marketing copy.
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