Every word you type.
Think about that for a moment.
Every message. Every search. Every note to yourself in the middle of the night that you deleted before sending. Every password, every diagnosis, every thing you typed and then thought better of.
Your keyboard has seen all of it. The question is: what did it do with what it saw?
Most keyboards send your keystrokes to a server for autocorrect, language modeling, “improvements.” The permission is buried in the terms of service. The data travels whether you meant it to or not.
Privacy Keyboard doesn’t.
There is nothing to send.
The Quiet Part, Said Plainly
You type something private. It stays private.
Not because we made a promise. Because we built something where the architecture answers before the question is asked. No network call. No telemetry. No log of what you typed and when and to whom.
Autocorrect works. Autocomplete works. Emoji suggestions, swipe typing, all of it — local, on-device, fast.
You lose nothing except the part where a company somewhere is reading over your shoulder.
What We Mean by Private
We do not mean: we encrypted it.
We do not mean: we anonymized it.
We do not mean: we take your privacy seriously (a phrase so overused it now means its opposite).
We mean: it never left your phone.
That is a different kind of claim. It is backed by architecture, not policy.
There is a specific feeling that arrives when software stops taking from you.
It is not triumph. You didn’t fight for this. It is quieter than that — more like noticing, for the first time in a long time, that nobody is in the room.
You type. The words are yours. That’s it.
Built to stay on your device
Platform
iOS / iPhone
Retail Price
$4.99 (one-time)
Network Access
None — By Design
Account Required
No
Processing
100% On-Device
Full Access Permission
Not Requested
Voice Input
On-Device Speech-to-Text