myle launches private-by-default workout tracking app

- Startup myle launched a private-by-default workout-tracking app on June 1, saying exercise data stays on-device rather than being broadly shared to the cloud. - A June 1 developer post said the app’s Turkish version was generating more than $3,000 in monthly revenue, ahead of an English release. - The next public milestone appears to be the English version’s availability, which the developer said was awaiting Apple review.

A June 1 launch post said startup myle released a workout-tracking app built around keeping exercise data on-device by default rather than routing it through a broader cloud-sharing model. A separate June 1 developer post tied to the product said the Turkish version was already generating more than $3,000 in monthly revenue and that an English version was waiting for Apple review. ### What, exactly, did myle say it launched? The June 1 social post describing myle called it a “private-by-default” workout tracker, framing privacy as the core product feature rather than an add-on. The launch language, as described in the source briefing, said workout data is intended to remain on the device and cloud sharing is minimized. That positioning puts myle in a small but visible slice of the fitness-app market that sells privacy as a product feature. (t.co) Other privacy-focused workout trackers already market “no account required” or on-device storage as a differentiator, showing there is an existing niche for users who do not want detailed health and activity logs widely synced or shared. ### Where does the revenue claim come from? A June 1 post by developer Muhammet A., whose account appears under the handle indiesoftwaredv in the source briefing, said the Turkish version of the app was producing more than $3,000 in monthly revenue. The same post, as surfaced in search results, also said the English version was still awaiting Apple review. The available web evidence does not independently verify the revenue figure through app-store analytics, filings or a company statement outside the developer’s own post. (nextsetworkout.com) The number is therefore best treated as a self-reported claim by the developer rather than a confirmed financial disclosure. ### How unusual is the privacy pitch in fitness apps? Fitness apps have long collected sensitive data, including workout history, location, biometrics and behavior patterns. (t.co) Privacy-focused directories and rival products now explicitly market against that model, promising local storage, limited analytics, or no mandatory account creation. That context helps explain why “private-by-default” is being used as a headline feature. (t.co) In consumer health and fitness software, privacy claims increasingly function as product positioning as much as technical architecture, especially for apps handling personal routines and health-adjacent information. ### What is still unclear about myle? The launch posts summarized in the briefing establish the app’s basic pitch, but several operating details remain unclear from public material reviewed so far. (privacyguides.org) The web search did not surface an official product site, app-store listing, or documentation page clearly tied to this specific myle workout app and matching the June 1 launch description. That means key details — including platform availability, subscription pricing, export options, backup design and the exact limits of any cloud sync — were not independently confirmed from primary product documentation in the material available online. ### What happens next? The clearest next step is the English-language release. The developer post surfaced in search results said that version was awaiting Apple review, which suggests a broader launch could depend on App Store approval rather than a separate funding or product announcement. (replog.co.uk) If that review clears, the next public evidence is likely to appear in an App Store listing or in additional posts from the developer account that made the June 1 revenue claim. (replog.co.uk) (t.co)

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