Security
Most security pages look the same.
- SOC 2.
- ISO 27001.
- Encryption.
- Compliance badges.
- Audit reports.
And don't get us wrong.
Those things matter.
But history has taught us something uncomfortable:
A company can have world-class security and still possess your data.
A company can have every certification imaginable and still become the target of governments, subpoenas, breaches, acquisitions, policy changes, insider access, or future decisions you never agreed to.
The problem isn't always whether the vault is secure.
The problem is that the vault exists.

The modern internet became obsessed with collection.
Collect more.
Store more.
Index more.
Analyze more.
Remember more.
Every product promises intelligence.
Most achieve it by gathering increasingly large amounts of information about the people using it.
We chose a different path.
Instead of asking:
"How do we secure more user data?"
We asked:
"How do we avoid needing it at all?"
That question changed the architecture of Fillr.
When Fillr organizes your browser, the work happens locally.
On your machine.
Not ours.
The organizer doesn't need years of browsing history.
It doesn't need your passwords.
It doesn't need your messages.
It doesn't need a permanent profile of who you are.
In fact, some of the most important engineering decisions inside Fillr exist specifically to prevent that information from ever becoming part of the system.
Tabs, not tracking
People often assume intelligence requires access to everything.
In reality, organizing a browser is a much simpler problem.
If GitHub, Cursor, ChatGPT, and Vercel are open, you're probably building software. If Canvas, Google Docs, and research papers are open, you're probably studying. If Netflix, Spotify, and YouTube are open, you're probably relaxing. Fillr doesn't need years of browsing history to understand those patterns. It only needs to understand the relationships between the tabs already in front of it.
That's why the product was designed to work with the information that's already on your screen instead of building a permanent profile of who you are.
The goal was never to build the largest dataset.
The goal was to preserve context.
Those are very different objectives.
Most AI products become more powerful by centralizing information.
Fillr becomes useful by minimizing what it needs to know.
The result is a simple philosophy:
Your projects belong to you.
Your research belongs to you.
Your ideas belong to you.
Your unfinished thoughts belong to you.
Your future belongs to you.

Not because privacy is fashionable.
Not because compliance requires it.
Because ownership matters.
Technology should help people keep control of their work.
Not slowly transfer that control somewhere else.
Security isn't just about protecting information.
It's about respecting who that information belongs to in the first place.
