Privacy
Privacy Policy
Last updated: July 7, 2026
The short version: Emeron doesn't collect, transmit, or store your data anywhere but your own device. There's no account, no server, and no tracking. Everything below just explains that in more detail.
What Emeron is
Emeron is a Chrome extension that helps you keep up with a few simple wellness habits throughout the day — drinking water, resting your eyes, moving around, taking a general break, and checking your posture. It shows this as a few calm, ambient rings that live quietly on the page you're already looking at.
What data Emeron stores, and where
Emeron stores a small amount of data so it can remember your setup from one day to the next: which rings you've turned on, your daily goals (like how many glasses of water you're aiming for), your reminder schedule and active hours, and your day-to-day progress and history.
All of it is saved using chrome.storage.local — a storage area built into Chrome that keeps data only on your own device. Emeron has no server of its own, and nothing you do in the extension is ever sent anywhere else.
No accounts, no sign-in
There's nothing to create and nothing to log into. Emeron works the moment you install it, and it has no idea who you are — there's no name, email, or account tied to your usage in any way.
No analytics or tracking
Emeron doesn't use analytics, crash reporting, or any third-party tracking service. It doesn't know how often you use it, what pages you visit, or anything else about your browsing — it isn't built to know, and it doesn't ask.
We don't share your data, because it never leaves your device
Emeron doesn't sell, share, or transfer your data to any third party. That's not a policy we're promising to uphold — it's just how the extension is built. Since nothing ever leaves your device in the first place, there's nothing to share.
The permissions Emeron asks for, and why
Chrome extensions have to declare upfront what they need access to. Here's what Emeron asks for and what each one is actually used for:
- Storage — to remember your rings, goals, schedule, and progress on your own device, so they're still there the next time you open your browser.
- Alarms — to time your reminders correctly (like nudging you every hour, or at a specific time you've chosen), even if the browser has been idle for a while.
- Notifications — to show you a gentle desktop notification when it's time for a break.
- Access to your pages — to draw the small ambient ring indicator directly on the page you're viewing, so you can glance at your progress without opening the extension. This access is only used to display the rings — Emeron doesn't read, collect, or transmit the content of any page you visit.
Clearing your data
Since everything Emeron stores lives only on your device, clearing it is simple: uninstalling the extension removes it all. There's nothing left behind on a server, because there never was anything there to begin with. You can also remove Emeron at any time by right-clicking its icon in Chrome's toolbar and choosing “Remove from Chrome.”
Changes to this policy
If anything about how Emeron handles data ever changes, this page will be updated to reflect it, along with the date at the top.
Questions
If you have any questions about this policy or how Emeron works, reach out at sankeerthm985@gmail.com.