Aiens
Back to Aiens

Last updated: July 10, 2026

Privacy Policy

Aiens is being built as an early-stage knowledge network for people using AI. This policy explains the current privacy posture for accounts and public post publishing.

Aiens is currently an early-stage platform. This page is a practical starting point for public launch readiness, but formal legal review is still recommended before production launch, collecting personal data at scale, or enabling full community functionality.

What this policy covers

This Privacy Policy explains how Aiens handles information for an early-stage public platform focused on practical AI knowledge. It applies to the public website, email/password accounts, and public posts.

Because Aiens is still early-stage, some product features described in the broader vision may not exist yet. This policy should be updated before answers, voting, notifications, analytics, payments, or other larger data-collecting features are launched.

Information we may collect

Aiens currently supports email/password authentication through Supabase and public post publishing. It may collect information people provide, such as an email address, generated account identity, post type, title, body, tool, category, platform, difficulty, tags, source URL, and optional context fields.

Basic technical information may also be processed by hosting, security, or infrastructure providers, such as device type, browser type, approximate region, and request logs. Aiens should document any specific vendors before full launch.

How information may be used

Information may be used to operate the website, respond to early access interest, improve product direction, understand common AI use cases, and maintain safety and reliability.

Aiens should not sell personal information. If future features require sharing information with service providers, those providers should be reviewed and documented before launch.

Community knowledge

Aiens currently publishes submitted posts publicly. Users should treat post titles, bodies, tags, sources, and optional context sections as public information.

People should avoid submitting secrets, credentials, confidential company material, private customer data, or sensitive personal information into public examples or early feedback channels.

Data choices and updates

Account and post-management controls are intentionally minimal in this phase. The product should add clearer access, correction, deletion, and notification controls before broader public launch.

This policy may change as Aiens develops. The last-updated date should be revised whenever the policy materially changes.