Alongside its once-a-day housekeeping, Trigr now sends one anonymous usage summary: a count of how many triggers, expansions and macros fired that day, plus the app version. It never includes what you typed, your snippets, or anything that could identify you or your machine. We cannot even tell that two days of counts came from the same person. It simply helps us see which features earn their place during the beta. Prefer not to share even that? One toggle in Settings > Privacy & Security turns it off.
The privacy policy at usetrigr.com now spells out exactly what is and is not sent.
Settings tidy-up: the Privacy & Security section now leads with the usage toggle, with the config and log folder shortcuts grouped below it.