Privacy

The short version: I don't collect anything.

No accounts, no analytics, no trackers, no cookies that follow you, no profile with your name on it. Not because a policy makes me — because privacy is the whole point of what I build.

I built FrogNet so your life would stop living on someone else's computer. It would be strange to run a surveillance operation on the website that says so.

So this site doesn't. There is no analytics script, no advertising pixel, no third-party tracker, and no cookie that identifies you. I don't know who you are, what else you've looked at, or where you go next — and I've built it that way on purpose.

  • No tracking, no analytics, no ads

    The site loads no analytics, no ad networks, and no social pixels. Nothing here is watching you read.

  • No accounts, no profiles

    You don't log in, and there's no database with your name in it. Nothing to leak, sell, or subpoena — because it doesn't exist.

  • Email only if you write to me

    If you request a license or send a message, you're composing an ordinary email. I use what you tell me only to write back — I don't add you to a list, and I don't pass it to anyone.

  • The product carries no telemetry

    FrogNet runs on your hardware. It doesn't phone home, report usage, or route your traffic through me. There's no centre to collect anything, by design — that's the architecture, not a promise.

  • Standard hosting logs, nothing more

    Whoever serves these pages may keep basic request logs (an IP address, a timestamp) the way every web server does. I don't build profiles from them, and I don't combine them with anything else.

If that ever changes

It won't change quietly. If anything about the above ever needs updating, it will be said plainly, right here, in the same plain language — not buried in a policy nobody reads.

— John W. Fawcett · Fawcett Innovations LLC · john@fawcettinnovations.com

Own it outright

The surest privacy is a network with no middle.

That's the real answer to "who can see this?" — nobody, because there's no company in the path. Read how it works, then run your own.