75together

01Introduction

This is a separate, dedicated privacy policy for consumer health data, published by Apace Active LLC ("Apace Active," "we," "our," or "us") for 75 Together. It exists because Washington's My Health My Data Act ("MHMDA"), Nevada's consumer health data law (SB 370), and similar laws treat the fitness data you log as health data and ask us to describe how we handle it in one clear place, apart from our general Privacy Policy.

This policy applies to you wherever you live, but Washington and Nevada residents in particular have specific rights under those state laws, described in Section 8.

Where this policy and our general Privacy Policy overlap, this one controls for consumer health data. Nothing here is medical advice, and 75 Together is not a medical device.

02Health data we collect

The consumer health data we collect is the data the app exists to track:

  • Daily check-in status — whether you completed each of the five daily challenge requirements (workout, water, reading, diet, progress photo) on a given day.
  • Body weight — the weight entries you choose to log so the app can show your trend.
  • Progress photos — the daily photos you choose to take or upload.

That is the complete list. We do not collect heart rate, sleep, steps, menstrual or reproductive data, precise location, or any biometric identifiers.

03Where it comes from

Every piece of health data above is entered by you, in the app. We do not read health data from any third-party source. There is no connection to Apple Health or HealthKit, no connection to Google Fit, and no connection to any wearable, scale, or other health service. Your weight is what you type; your check-ins are what you tap; your photos are what you take.

04Why we collect it

We collect and process this health data for a small, fixed set of purposes:

  • To operate the challenge — record your daily progress, day count, and streak.
  • To sync your progress across your own devices.
  • If you choose to pair, and for each photo you choose to share, to make that specific data visible to your partner.
  • To diagnose crashes and errors (crash reports do not include your photos, check-in details, or weight — see our Privacy Policy).

We do not use your health data for advertising, marketing, profiling, model training, or any purpose beyond operating the Services.

05Who we share it with

Two kinds of sharing happen, and both are under your control:

Your partner. If you pair with someone, they can see your daily check-in status and progress. Your progress photos stay private unless you share them one at a time; by default they are not shared.

Service providers. We rely on a closed set of processors to run the app. Each receives only what its function requires, and none may use your health data for their own purposes:

  • Google Firebase — backend, authentication, data sync, notifications.
  • Sentry — crash and error reporting.
  • RevenueCat — subscription management.
  • Apple — App Store payments and Sign in with Apple.

That is the complete list of parties your consumer health data can reach. We do not share it with data brokers, ad networks, or marketing partners.

06We do not sell it

We do not sell your consumer health data. Washington and Nevada both define "sale" broadly, so to be unambiguous: we do not exchange your health data for money or other valuable consideration with anyone, and we never have. There is no arrangement under which any party pays us, or we pay any party, for this data. We also do not ask you to sign an "authorization to sell," because there is nothing to authorize.

07How your photos are protected

Your progress photos are the most sensitive health data in the app, and they are protected the most strictly:

  • Encrypted on your device before upload. Each device holds a random encryption key in its secure hardware (iOS Keychain / Android Keystore) that never leaves the device. We only ever receive ciphertext, so we cannot open your photos.
  • Location metadata removed. Photos are re-encoded on your device before encryption, which strips EXIF and GPS data.
  • Shared photos stay end-to-end encrypted. A photo you share gets a second encrypted copy under a key only you and your partner hold; when we deliver that key to your partner, it is sealed so only their device can open it. It passes through our servers as a blob we cannot unlock.

Because we cannot read your photos, we also cannot recover them for you. If you set a photo password and forget it, or move to a new device without a backup, your photos cannot be recovered by anyone. Full detail is in our Privacy Policy.

08Your rights & withdrawing consent

You have the right to access your consumer health data, to delete it, and to withdraw consent to its collection or sharing. These rights are guaranteed to Washington and Nevada residents under those states' consumer health data laws, and we extend them to everyone.

Access

Most of your health data is visible directly in the app. For a complete export, email [email protected].

Deletion

Deleting your account from within the app deletes your check-in history, weight entries, and photos (including any shared copies) from our active systems within 30 days. If you have trouble deleting in the app, email us and we will process it manually.

Withdrawing consent to sharing

Consent to share is separate from consent to collect. You do not have to delete your account or unpair to stop sharing:

  • Photos: sharing is per photo, and you opt in one photo at a time. To withdraw a shared photo, delete that photo — deleting it removes both your copy and your partner's copy from our servers. Deleting one photo does not delete your account and does not end your pairing.
  • Everything else (check-in status, progress): this is shared with your partner only while you are paired. Unpairing stops all of it going forward and, for photos, deletes the shared copies and destroys the shared key.

To withdraw consent, or to ask any question about your health data, email [email protected] with the subject line "Health Data Request."

09Contact us

Questions about your consumer health data?