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Door Ready — Privacy

Last updated: June 2026

I'm an indie dev. I make Door Ready alone (under the name Koirala Studio), and I don't want your data. This page exists because Apple and various privacy laws want one, and because if you're going to install my app you deserve to know what it does.

Short version

No account. No sign-up, no name, no email login. Saved looks stay on your iPhone. When you run a check, the one photo you pick gets sent securely to Google's Gemini (through Firebase) so the AI can read your outfit — then it's gone from my servers. I use Firebase Analytics and Crashlytics to see what's breaking. I don't track you across other apps, I don't run ads, and I don't sell your data.

What stays on your device

Door Ready stores your saved looks (photos and occasion labels), any custom occasions you create, and your settings locally on your iPhone. I don't upload that stuff for storage or sync — it's yours on your phone. Delete the app and it's gone. iPhone backups (iCloud or local) may include it, but that's Apple's backup, not mine.

What I don't collect

I don't sell data to anyone because there's no data to sell.

Permissions Door Ready asks for

Camera — so you can take a full-length outfit photo to check. You can say no and pick from your library instead.

Photo Library — when you choose an existing photo, iOS hands me only that one image. The app doesn't browse or upload your whole camera roll.

You can turn either off anytime in iOS Settings → Privacy & Security, or in Settings → Door Ready.

Third-party services

When you run an outfit check, that photo goes over an encrypted connection to Google Firebase and on to Google's Gemini model — only to return the read you asked for. I don't keep it on a server afterward. Saved looks never take this trip; only the photo you're actively checking.

Door Ready also uses Google Firebase Analytics to see how the app is used in aggregate — screens opened, paywall views, that kind of thing. Not your outfit photos, not your look book. Firebase Crashlytics gets crash reports so I can fix bugs. Firebase App Check (with Apple's App Attest) makes sure requests come from a real copy of the app, not a bot hammering the service — that doesn't identify you.

If you subscribe to Door Ready Pro, RevenueCat handles the subscription handshake. They get an anonymous ID plus what Apple sends about the purchase. I never see your card or billing address. Free users never touch RevenueCat. Google's privacy notice: policies.google.com/privacy. Firebase: firebase.google.com/support/privacy. RevenueCat: revenuecat.com/privacy.

What Apple sees on its own

When you download Door Ready, Apple processes your App Store account, the download itself, and any crash reports you choose to share. That's Apple's deal — see apple.com/legal/privacy. I might see aggregate numbers (total installs, anonymized crash stacks if you opted in), but never anything tied to you personally.

Your rights, briefly

Delete individual looks or wipe your whole look book in the app. Cancel Pro in iOS Settings → your name → Subscriptions, or from Door Ready's Settings screen.

Privacy laws give you the right to know what someone's holding about you, to ask them to fix or delete it, and to complain if they refuse. Email support@koirala.studio and I'll respond within 30 days. For most of your data the answer is "it's on your phone, not with me" — but I'll confirm in writing.

Kids

Door Ready isn't designed for or directed at children under 13. I don't knowingly collect personal information from anyone under 13. I don't run a server that holds your saved looks — if a parent contacts me, I'll explain what's on the device and that deleting the app removes local data. Email support@koirala.studio.

If this policy changes

I'll update the date at the top and surface a notice in Door Ready for anything material.

Contact

Koirala Studio · Ontario, Canada
support@koirala.studio