What people usually want from a GLP‑1 tracker
- One place to log injections (date/time/dose/site, as prescribed)
- Reminders so you don’t miss a week
- Progress tracking (weight, notes, photos if you want)
- Privacy that matches how personal this is
Privacy & data handling (what the policies actually say)
This is not a legal summary. It’s a practical comparison based on published privacy policies and terms.
| Topic | Jabbit | Shotsy |
|---|---|---|
| iOS health data storage | Jabbit’s privacy policy says your health data is stored locally and syncs via your personal iCloud account (CloudKit), and that Jabbit does not access or store your health logs on its servers. | Shotsy’s privacy policy says on iOS “No user account required” and that your data stays private in your personal iCloud unless you choose to share/export. |
| Third‑party analytics / attribution | Jabbit’s privacy policy states it does not include advertising SDKs or third‑party analytics tools that access your personal data. | Shotsy’s privacy policy lists services used for analytics/attribution (e.g., Mixpanel and AppsFlyer) and website analytics (Google Analytics), and states they do not sell data or use health data for advertising. |
| Medical disclaimer | Jabbit’s site is educational only and not medical advice. | Shotsy’s terms include a “Not a Medical Device” disclaimer and advise users to consult clinicians. |
So… which should you pick?
If you want iOS + iCloud‑based syncing and minimal tracking surface area: Jabbit is designed to be calm and privacy‑first.
If you’re comparing trackers, read the privacy policy/terms for each app and decide what tradeoffs you’re comfortable with.
Try Jabbit in 60 seconds
- Set your schedule/reminder
- Log your next injection (date/time/dose/site)
- Optionally log weight + a short note