Data privacy has become a luxury in the era of artificial intelligence. Facing giants like ChatGPT or Gemini, Eustella was born, a personal assistant created by the Austrian company newsrooms.ai. This app works on mobile phones and browsers, allowing you to generate images, edit documents, or analyze files, with the promise that all information is stored encrypted on European servers, without being used to train models.
European encryption for everyday tasks 🔒
Eustella relies on an architecture of servers located in the European Union, with end-to-end encryption for queries and uploaded files. The app integrates proprietary and open-source language models to answer questions, draft texts, or interpret uploaded documents. Its image generation engine also operates under these standards. The proposal is clear: offer functionalities similar to those of its competitors, but without user data leaving the European control perimeter, complying with the GDPR.
Goodbye to AI knowing what time you order pizza 🍕
Eustella arrives to save your digital conscience, just when you were starting to suspect that ChatGPT knew more about your life than your therapist. Now, instead of a machine in California memorizing your searches for croquette recipes, your data will sleep peacefully on a server in Frankfurt. All very European, very serious, and very encrypted. Of course, the app will still be just as nosy, but at least now it will do so with manners and without sharing your secrets with anyone.