Privacy Policy

We don't want your data.

Most privacy policies explain how a company collects your information. Ours is short because we barely collect any. Here it is, in plain English.

Last updated: June 10, 2026

The one thing we collect

Anonymous page statistics — which pages get visited and which games get played, as aggregate counts.

We use Cloudflare Web Analytics, a privacy-first tool: it sets no cookies, does no fingerprinting, and cannot identify or follow individual visitors. We see numbers like "the spelling games were played a lot this week" — never who played them. We use this only to understand what's useful and to keep the site fast.

What we never collect

  • Names, emails, or any personal information
  • Accounts or logins — kids never sign up for anything
  • Cookies, fingerprinting, or cross-site tracking
  • Game scores — they live in your browser and vanish when you leave
  • Location data or behavioral profiles
  • Anything to sell — we have no ads and no data buyers

Cookies

We don't set any. That's why there's no cookie banner — there's nothing to consent to. The only cookies on this site are the ones in the spelling lists.

Children's privacy

Learnosaur is built for kids, so we hold ourselves to the strictest standard: we never ask children for personal information — not a name, not an email, not a photo, nothing. Games run entirely in the browser, and progress is forgotten the moment the tab closes.

When teacher accounts arrive

The Teacher Hub is rolling out. When it does, accounts and analytics will belong to the teacher — students will join with a class code and still never need an email address. We'll update this page in plain English before anything changes.

Questions?

The site is open source, so you don't have to take our word for any of this — you can read the code yourself. If something here is unclear, questions and suggestions are always welcome on the project's open-source repository.

If this policy ever changes, we'll update the date at the top and explain what changed — no silent edits, no legal fog.