Hearr

Docs

Privacy And Voice Data Retention

Frame Hearr trust around private voice samples and personal reading material with clear, reviewable language.

Goal

Understand the privacy topics Hearr should address before users commit personal material.

Context

People use Hearr with personal books, notes, documents, and voice samples, so privacy expectations shape product trust.

Prerequisites

  • Awareness of the voice sample and reading material you plan to use

Expected outcome

You understand the trust questions that matter before you upload voice samples or personal reading material.

Step-by-step

Step 1

Review current trust language

Confirm how Hearr describes storage, deletion, access, and user control before you rely on the workflow.

Step 2

Check what material you are uploading

Treat both your voice sample and your reading material as sensitive inputs that deserve deliberate handling.

Step 3

Use the trust hub for deeper topics

Continue to the trust page for the detailed topics that support Hearr's privacy positioning.

FAQ

Q: Should I treat voice samples and reading material as sensitive inputs?

A: Yes. Review current trust language first and only upload material you are comfortable processing through the workflow.

Q: What should Hearr trust copy clarify before users rely on it?

A: It should clarify storage, deletion, access, and retention claims in language that product and legal teams can support.

Continue reading