Last updated: July 11, 2026
Lynku is a personal contact book. This page explains, in plain language, what the app does with your data. The short version: everything lives on your phone, and nothing leaves it without a deliberate action from you.
Lynku is published by its independent creator. For any question about this policy or your data: [email protected].
This data is stored in the app's storage on your device. If you use iCloud backup or a computer backup, it is included, like your other apps' data (that backup is handled by Apple, according to your Apple settings).
1. When you ask for a message or gift ideas (✨ / 🎁).
To write a personalized message, the app sends our artificial intelligence
provider (Anthropic, the Claude service) the relevant parts of the card
in question: first name, last name, nickname, job, company, circle name,
age and zodiac sign (if the birthday is filled in), that card's interests
and notes, plus your optional instruction. Never sent: phone numbers,
emails, addresses, related people, or the rest of your book. This
information is used solely to generate the requested text, under
Anthropic's privacy policy.
2. When you type an address in a card.
To suggest complete addresses as you type, the text you type in the address
field (and it alone) is sent to the Photon geocoding service
(photon.komoot.io), a free service based on OpenStreetMap. Nothing else
goes with it.
3. When you send feedback (🐞 problem or 💡 idea).
Your message is delivered through the Web3Forms service to our email
inbox, along with a few technical details shown on screen before
sending: app version, iPhone model, iOS version, language, and the
number of contacts (never their content). Your email address is
attached only if you provide it, so we can reply.
As with any communication over the Internet, these services technically see the connection's IP address at the time of the request.
Since your data lives on your device, you control it directly:
For data sent with feedback (the only case where we receive anything), you can request deletion at [email protected]. If you believe your rights are not being respected, you can contact your country's data protection authority.
Your book describes people around you. As long as you use it for personal and household purposes, this falls under your private use (article 2(2)(c) of the GDPR) — Lynku has no access to it and no responsibility for it. If you share a card or an export, that is a deliberate action on your part: share with the same care you would expect for your own information. Out of respect for the people in your book, notes, circles, interests and links are never included when sharing a card (only identity, contact details and birthday are).
Lynku is not intended for children under 13 and does not knowingly collect any data about them.
If this policy evolves (for example if the technical architecture changes), the new version will be published on this page with its update date. If what is transmitted changes in any meaningful way, the app will tell you.