DraftTrack Privacy Policy
What DraftTrack does
When you click Analyze writing process on a Google Doc, DraftTrack reads that document's edit history — the same revision history Google already keeps — using your own logged-in Google session. It reconstructs how the document was written (typing versus pasting, writing sessions, and which accounts edited it) and shows you a report in a new browser tab.
What data is accessed, and where it goes
- Google Doc revision history of the document you choose to analyze. This is read directly from Google using your own browser session and is processed entirely on your device.
- The reconstructed analysis is held only in your browser's memory for the duration
of the report tab. To pass the data from the document page to the report tab, DraftTrack briefly uses
Chrome's in-memory session storage (
chrome.storage.session), which is never written to disk and is cleared automatically when you close your browser. The report deletes its copy as soon as it loads. - When you close the report tab, the analysis is gone.
What DraftTrack never does
- It never sends document content, your identity, or any analysis to any server — there is no server.
- It never stores anything on disk.
- It never uses analytics, tracking, advertising, or third-party SDKs.
- It never sells or shares data with anyone.
- It only runs on
docs.google.comdocument pages. It cannot see your other tabs or browsing.
Permissions and why they exist
- Access to docs.google.com — to read the revision history of the document you analyze and to add the "Analyze writing process" button.
- Tabs — to open the report in a new tab.
- Storage — to briefly hand the analysis from the document page to the report tab using in-memory session storage only (never disk).
Chrome Web Store Limited Use compliance
DraftTrack's use of any information accessed through your Google session complies with the Chrome Web Store Limited Use policy. DraftTrack accesses a document's revision history only to provide the writing-process report you requested; it processes that information entirely on your device; it never transfers the information to any server (there is none); it never uses the information for advertising, personalization, profiling, or any purpose other than the report; and it never sells or shares it. DraftTrack requests no Google OAuth scopes and uses no Google API keys — it relies solely on your own signed-in browser session to read documents you can already open.
A note on responsible use
DraftTrack shows how a document was written. It does not determine whether anyone cheated, and it should never be used as sole proof of misconduct. Use it to start an honest conversation with a student about their writing process. Always follow your school's academic-integrity procedures and applicable student-privacy laws (such as FERPA).
Children's privacy
DraftTrack is a tool for educators. It is not directed to children, requires no account, and collects no personal information from anyone — including students whose documents are analyzed. Because nothing is ever collected or transmitted, no student data is gathered, retained, or shared by DraftTrack.
Changes to this policy
If this policy changes, the updated version will be posted at this URL with a new "last updated" date. Because DraftTrack collects no data, any change will concern functionality rather than data handling.
Contact
Questions about this policy or DraftTrack: hello@classroomreadyai.com · classroomreadyai.com