How does twinme protect my data?

By not collecting any of your personal information, twinme avoids their dissemination, either voluntarily (e.g. commercial) or not (piracy, in particular).

twinme does not require you to sign-up with personal information such as a phone number, email address, or social network ID. You are not personally identified by the application, twinme only knows about your device that can communicate with your contacts’ device. twinme does not have any personal information about anyone using twinme and it cannot use your device address book to try identify people you may know that could have installed twinme as well. This is why you need to invite twinme contacts explicitly, because “you” know them, not twinme.

However, twinme does store on your device, and as a back-up on its servers, your profile attributes (names and images) as well as your contacts’.

All exchanged contents (messages, photos) and voice/video calls, happen in peer-to-peer directly from device to device, without a staging server storing data in between. Contents remain on the end devices and can be wiped out on both ends simultaneously by a simple tap from either end. In addition, all exchanges are end-to-end encrypted by the open source WebRTC protocol used for peer-to-peer multimedia and data exchanges. WebRTC uses the “TLS” encryption protocol, a web standard for accessing secure sites (https), also available in open source.

twinme is indeed one of the most respectful private messenger application, not only for you, but for your contacts as well. Check twinme Privacy Policy for more details.

How does twinme protect my data?

By not collecting any of your personal information, twinme avoids their dissemination, either voluntarily (e.g. commercial) or not (piracy, in particular).

twinme does not require you to sign-up with personal information such as a phone number, email address, or social network ID. You are not personally identified by the application, twinme only knows about your device that can communicate with your contacts’ device. twinme does not have any personal information about anyone using twinme and it cannot use your device address book to try identify people you may know that could have installed twinme as well. This is why you need to invite twinme contacts explicitly, because “you” know them, not twinme.

However, twinme does store on your device, and as a back-up on its servers, your profile attributes (names and images) as well as your contacts’.

All exchanged contents (messages, photos) and voice/video calls, happen in peer-to-peer directly from device to device, without a staging server storing data in between. Contents remain on the end devices and can be wiped out on both ends simultaneously by a simple tap from either end. In addition, all exchanges are end-to-end encrypted by the open source WebRTC protocol used for peer-to-peer multimedia and data exchanges. WebRTC uses the “TLS” encryption protocol, a web standard for accessing secure sites (https), also available in open source.

twinme is indeed one of the most respectful private messenger application, not only for you, but for your contacts as well. Check twinme Privacy Policy for more details.