An ID, not an identity
The first time you open NOLO, an anonymous ID (like nolo_a7b3_x9k2) is generated and stored in your browser. That is your account.
Most AI assistants make you hand over an email before you can type a word. NOLO doesn't. No account, no email, no profile, just an anonymous ID on your device. Here is how it works and why it's the strongest kind of privacy.
The best privacy is the data that was never collected. Account-free AI simply doesn't gather it.
The first time you open NOLO, an anonymous ID (like nolo_a7b3_x9k2) is generated and stored in your browser. That is your account.
No email means no spam, no marketing list, no password to leak, and no way to tie your questions to the real you.
Your conversations live in your browser, not in a company database. Clear the browser and they are gone.
Every account is a record of you that has to be stored, secured and trusted.
Nothing to sign up for, so nothing to profile.
Yes. NOLO needs no sign-up at all. The first time you open it, an anonymous ID is generated and kept in your browser, and that ID is your access. No email, no password, no profile.
No email means no spam and no marketing profile. No account means there is no identity to link your questions to, no login to be breached, and nothing tying your conversations to the real you.
You copy your anonymous ID from one device and paste it on another. Optionally you can enable an encrypted backup in your own cloud drive, encrypted on your device before it is uploaded, so even the backup is unreadable to anyone but you.
You lose access to that account's plan and any synced history, exactly because there is no email to recover it with. That is the trade-off of true anonymity, so it's worth saving your ID somewhere safe.
Yes. Anonymity does not lower safety; it lowers exposure. There is simply less personal data collected about you in the first place, which is the strongest kind of privacy.
No account, no email, no tracking. Open NOLO and start typing, that's the whole sign-up.