Washington and Nevada Resident Privacy Notice

Last Updated: April 27, 2026

This Washington and Nevada Resident Privacy Notice (“Privacy Notice”) adds to the Jano Life Privacy Policy. It applies only to personal data called “consumer health data” under state law. These laws are the Washington State My Health My Data Act (MHMDA) and the Nevada Health Data Privacy Act (NHDPA) (together, “U.S. State Health Privacy Laws”).

What Categories of Consumer Health Data Do We Collect?

We collect the following types of Consumer Health Data, based on how you use Jano Life and the Petal:

 

  • Individual health conditions, treatment, diseases, or diagnosis: This covers data from the Petal sensors. It includes ECG data, heart rate, resting heart rate, heart rate variability, heart rate zones, breath rate, and body temperature.
  • Bodily functions, vital signs, symptoms, or measurements: This covers BIA data used to gauge body fat and muscle. It also covers metabolic rate, calories burned, and activity level.
  • Biometric data: Jano Life uses your device's built-in security to unlock the app. This means FaceID or TouchID. The raw data from the Petal (ECG and BIA) may count as biometric data under state law. We will get your clear, unbundled consent before we collect or use this data.
  • Data related to state of mind: This covers daytime stress levels from our algorithms. It also covers "mindful minutes" and "state of mind" data from Apple HealthKit.
  • Health-related inferences: This covers auto insights and personal tips from our algorithms. They cover your heart and body metrics, like readiness or activity scores.

Where Do We Get Your Consumer Health Data?

We collect Consumer Health Data from these sources:

  • Directly from the Jano Petal Device: Passive input from the ECG, BIA, and IMU sensors.
  • Directly from You: Info you log in the Jano app (like profile data and cycle tracking).
  • Third-Party Connected Platforms: Data you let us pull from Apple HealthKit (and in the future, Google Health Connect and Terra).
  • Interaction with our Services: Tech logs from syncing the Petal with the app.our Services: Technical logs generated during device-to-app syncing.

Why Do We Collect and Use Your Data?

We use Consumer Health Data for these purposes:

  • To Provide and Maintain Services: To process raw sensor data. This gives you health insights, tracks progress, and powers safety features like fall detection.
  • Personalization: To give you health tips based on your own baselines.
  • Product Improvement: To train our algorithms and fix bugs.
  • Research: To make anonymized data for research (including with schools like George Washington University).

Who Do We Share Your Consumer Health Data With?

We may share the Consumer Health Data above with these third parties:

  • Service Providers: AI and engineering consultants in India and South Korea. They help us train our algorithms and improve the product.
  • Connected Health Ecosystems: If you turn on third-party integrations, we share data (like heart rate and HRV) with Apple HealthKit, as you direct.
  • Research Partners: We share anonymized data with George Washington University and may add other school partners for research.
  • Legal & Corporate Requirements: To comply with the law or if we go through a merger or sale.

Note: We do not let third parties track your Consumer Health Data over time or across other sites while you use our Services. The only exceptions are the health platform integrations (like Apple HealthKit) that you turn on. We take technical measures to block third-party ad tracking pixels inside the Jano mobile app.

What Are Your Privacy Rights?

These state laws give you rights over your Consumer Health Data.

  • You have the right to access your data.
  • You have the right to confirm if we share or sell it.
  • You have the right to delete it.
  • You can also withdraw your consent.

Submitting Requests: To use your rights, email us at privacy@petal.today. If we deny your request, you can appeal. Contact the Washington State Attorney General (www.atg.wa.gov) or the Nevada State Attorney General (https://ag.nv.gov/Contact).