The short version: nothing. Focal looks at your design, predicts where attention lands, and forgets the image immediately. We don't store it, log it, or train on it. The rest of this page is the full explanation.
When you scan a design — either through the Figma plugin or by uploading a screenshot to our website — that image is sent to our inference server so our saliency model can predict the attention heatmap.
If you upload a design containing personal information, that information lives on our server for one or two seconds and is then gone. We have no way to retrieve it after that.
To keep the service running and detect abuse, our hosting provider (Hugging Face) automatically records standard request metadata — the time of each request, the response time, and the requesting IP address. These logs:
On our website's playground, all interactions (cursor movement, layer toggles, opacity changes) happen entirely in your browser. We do not run any analytics tracking, advertising trackers, or behavioural cookies. We don't know who you are, where you came from, or where you go next.
The Figma plugin behaves the same way — it does not phone home or collect telemetry. The only network request it makes is the actual scan call to our inference server.
Focal AI is a small project, and we use the following infrastructure providers to keep it running:
Each of these is a standard, established provider. We do not have any partnerships, advertising relationships, or data sharing arrangements with them beyond the standard service relationship.
Because we don't store your images, there's nothing to delete, export, or correct on request. If you have a question about something else — what we'd do in a hypothetical situation, how something works, a concern we haven't addressed — please email us using the address below.
If we ever change how Focal AI handles data — for example, if we add an opt-in feature to save your scan history for your own use — we'll update this page with the new date at the top, and we'll add a clear notice on the homepage. We won't quietly change the rules.