Privacy Policy

Last updated June 22, 2026

This Privacy Policy explains what information Reverie collects when you use the site, how we use it, and the choices you have. By using Reverie you agree to the practices described here.

Information we collect

When you create an account we collect your email address and display name. As you use Reverie we store the content you create, the stories you generate, the premises you write, and the comments, likes, and library you build, along with basic usage needed to run the service.

How we use it

We use your information to provide and personalize the service: signing you in, generating and saving your reveries, showing your library, powering Discover, and improving the product. We do not sell your personal information.

AI generation

The premises you submit are sent to our AI providers to generate stories, narration, and cover art. Don't include personal or sensitive information in a premise that you wouldn't want processed by a third-party model.

Cookies

We use a single secure, http-only session cookie to keep you signed in. We do not use third-party advertising or cross-site tracking cookies.

Data storage & security

Account and story data are stored in a managed database; generated audio and cover images are served from a content-delivery network. We take reasonable measures to protect your data, though no method of transmission or storage is ever completely secure.

Your choices

You can edit your profile and password in account settings, and request deletion of your account and reveries by contacting us. Published reveries that others have read or extended may persist in their context.

Children

Reverie is not directed to children under 13, and we do not knowingly collect personal information from them.

Changes & contact

We may update this policy from time to time; material changes will be reflected by the 'last updated' date above. Questions? Reach us through the contact details on our site.

This is a starter template, not legal advice. Have it reviewed by a qualified attorney, especially the copyright terms, before relying on it in production.