For clinicians
What it is
A self-monitoring app for compulsive porn use. Local-only data. AES on-device encryption with a key in the device’s secure enclave. No accounts, no telemetry, no third-party data flow.
Who it is for
Clients with whom you’d recommend a tracking adjunct between sessions, particularly those for whom data privacy is part of their concern (high-public-profile clients, clients with complex digital threat models, clients with shame around the topic that’s intensified by the idea of an account on a server somewhere).
How it works
Single press-and-hold logging avoids the friction of typed entries that often kill self-monitoring habits. Streak and pattern visualizations support reflection without gamifying outcomes. Export-to-JSON enables a client to share data in session if they choose; nothing is shared automatically.
Why this approach
The literature on self-monitoring as a behavioral intervention is well-established. The privacy posture is a deliberate choice to remove the most common reason clients stop using digital tools: the unease of personal data accumulating somewhere they don’t control.
For clinicians: What therapists and clinicians should know about app-based recovery tools · How encryption works in against..
What we do not claim
against. is not a treatment. It is a self-monitoring adjunct. We make no claim of efficacy beyond the documented benefits of self-monitoring as one component of behavioral change. Clinical decisions remain with you and your client.
Common questions
Does the app integrate with my EHR? No. By design.
Is there a clinician portal? No. Clients share data verbally in session, or by exporting JSON if they choose.
Are there outcome studies? Not yet. We will publish methodology details and citations on the Methodology page; outcome research is out of scope at launch.