
Arritos Playlist
The first cornerstone — music that rewards listening, on-device, live on the App Store and Google Play.
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On-board Intelligence. 100% local. 100% private. 100% yours.
An independent studio building an ecosystem of on-device intelligence — where your data never leaves your hands.
Arritos Technology is an independent studio founded in Paris, in the Plaine Monceau. The name comes from the Ancient Greek arrhetos: the secret, the unspeakable. It was guarded by the Pythagorean philosophers, whispered in the Eleusinian Mysteries, and held by Plato for ideas too pure for ordinary language. We chose it because transformative work begins in silence, in patient and obsessive craft, long before the world is ready to listen.
We build one thing: an ecosystem of on-device AI that runs entirely on your phone. No cloud, no tracking, no extraction. Voice, accessibility, and privacy are not features layered onto a product. They are the product. Hey Arri, our offline wake word, is the way you reach it.
Three convictions define us. Independence, so the roadmap answers to no sponsor and no advertiser. Privacy, treated here as a moral obligation rather than a setting. Execution, because what cannot be spoken must be shown.
What cannot be spoken must be shown.
Almost every AI on your phone today does its thinking somewhere else. Your words, your photos, your voice travel to a remote data center, and the bill is paid in the only currency that scales: you. The pattern is now well documented. Models are trained on data scraped from the open web without meaningful consent. What you type into a free assistant can be retained and reused to tune the next one. From fragments that look harmless, these systems infer what was never offered. None of this is malice. It is simply the architecture of an industry that decided convenience was worth your privacy, and asked no one. We do not blame the people who accepted that trade, because it was never presented as one. The cost was quiet, and quiet costs are the easiest to overlook. But the ground is moving. The industry is now shifting intelligence back onto the device, because that is where it always belonged.
When the product is free, the price is you.
A quiet inversion has taken hold. The tools meant to serve us now study us, and the most lucrative ones are built to hold attention rather than to leave us better off. The pattern is documented, not hypothetical. A 2024 review by the FTC and international consumer authorities found that nearly three quarters of the subscription sites and apps examined used at least one deceptive design pattern, the most common being the inability to cancel auto-renewal within the purchase flow. Stanford's 2025 AI Index counted 233 AI incidents in 2024, a 56.4 percent rise in a single year, while public trust in AI companies to protect personal data fell from 50 to 47 percent. Profiling carries a cost: in Ireland, behavioral targeting without a valid legal basis drew a 310-million-euro penalty.
None of this is the user's fault. It is the predictable output of a model that measures success in attention captured and data extracted. We built Arritos as the refusal of that model. The intelligence runs on your device. Your data is processed locally, encrypted, and never sold or profiled. There is nothing to harvest, because there is no harvest.
The drift is not a glitch in the system. It is the system working as designed.
Most of what we use every day is free because we are not the customer. We are the inventory. Personal data has become one of the most traded commodities on earth, brokered, profiled, and inferred long after we tap accept. This is not a failure of the system; it is the system working as designed, and the people who built it would tell you the same.
The honest part is that no one chose this on purpose. We traded our attention for convenience, one reasonable decision at a time, and only later saw the ledger. Breaches now arrive on a schedule. The more a service knows, the more there is to lose when it leaks.
A quieter shift is underway. As models grow capable enough to run on the phone itself, the case for sending intimate data to a distant server weakens. The most private data is the data that was never exploited. That is the line we build behind.
The most private data is the data that was never exploited.
Most people no longer feel they own the device in their pocket. In a 2023 Pew study of more than five thousand U.S. adults, 73 percent said they have no control over what is done with their data, and 67 percent admitted they understand little about it. A 2024 Deloitte survey found that 79 percent see no clear way to control what their providers collect. This is not a literacy gap. It is the design. Attention has been weaponized, behavior turned into inventory, and the diary in everyone's pocket quietly forwarded to parties no one chose.
The need is not another feature. It is a different contract. People want tools that work for them, not on them: software that runs offline, holds nothing back to a server, and treats memory, voice, and attention as the user's own. Arritos answers in kind. On-board Intelligence. One hundred percent local. One hundred percent private. One hundred percent yours. We do not ask for trust by promising to handle data well. We earn it by never exploiting or disclosing the little we hold, kept solely for the ecosystem's internal operation.
The strongest privacy promise is the data you never collect.
Personal data has become the most traded commodity on earth. The global market for brokered data was valued at roughly $294 billion in 2025, and the collection that feeds it is now the norm: independent testing in 2025 found that the majority of mobile apps carry both sensitive user data and tracking domains, much of it routed through advertising and analytics SDKs you never see. This is the default most people never agreed to. We build the opposite default.
Arritos runs on the phone. The intelligence that reads your photos and answers your voice is on-device: those memories are processed locally, and they never leave your hands for us to inspect. This is not a setting you switch on. It is the architecture. We hold the few details an account requires, such as your email, for our communication, encrypted when in transit or when compiled to synchronize accounts; and we never sell, barter, profile, or commercially target any of it. Your data belongs to you.
We treat this not as a feature but as an obligation, written into our Local Data Act. The principle does not change as the ecosystem grows: you are the owner, and your private life is yours to keep.
You are the owner. Your private life is yours to keep.
Arritos is not one application but an ecosystem of modules, each carved from the same stone. Every module does one thing, with full intent: Playlist rewards the act of listening, Temple sorts a lifetime of photos, and the modules ahead, Flora and Shield among them, will each hold their own discipline. None of them reach for the cloud. The intelligence runs on the device, where your life already lives.
What binds them is not a login but a language. Hey Arri, our offline wake word, lets you move through every module by voice alone, no screen required. GoldenOr, earned simply by using what you already own, is the thread that hands you the next module when you are ready: never a price alone, but also a reward; for the merchandise is not you. Like your email, your data is kept encrypted in transit and at rest, never sold, bartered, or profiled. Your data belongs to you. Your module too.
The plan is patient: roughly thirty modules over the coming years, built without sponsors or advertising, each one a stone in the same cathedral.
Thirty modules, one language: yours.
Every Arritos model runs on the phone itself. The neural processors now built into modern silicon let us classify photos, understand speech, and answer the voice without a single server in the loop. There is no inference in the cloud, because there is no cloud. Hey Arri is our own offline wake word, trained in-house and never borrowed from another assistant; it listens locally, and the words you speak are turned to action on the device that heard them. Speech recognition is local. Sorting is local. Your gallery is read where it lives, and it stays there.
This is a deliberate architecture, not a feature we toggle on. When data never leaves the device, there is no breach to suffer, no recording to store, no profile to assemble. The industry is moving toward on-device intelligence; we built the entire ecosystem on it from the first line. The engineering is patient and quiet by design. What the machine learns about you, it keeps with you.
No cloud to trust, because nothing leaves the device.
For a generation, intelligence has been something you rent. It lives on someone else's servers, learns from everything you do, and answers first to shareholders. Arritos was built on the opposite premise: that the most personal technology of our time should belong to the person using it.
We make AI that runs entirely on your device. Your photos, your voice, your habits stay where they are created and are processed there, never shipped to the cloud, never sold, never turned into a profile. Hey Arri, our offline wake word, lets you reach that intelligence without a screen and without an account watching.
This is intelligence as personal infrastructure rather than a leased service. Across Playlist, Temple, and the modules that follow, the principle does not bend: on-device first, private by construction, accessible by voice. We are not asking you to trust us with your inner world. We are handing it back. With the Arritos Cloud module, you will hold your own encrypted, decentralized cloud, perpetual on the Polygon blockchain; you alone will be able to access, keep, use, or monetize your data. Arritos Technology — because security is a right.
On-board Intelligence. 100% local. 100% private. 100% yours.
We are building one ecosystem in roughly thirty modules over about two years. Playlist is live; Temple follows; Shield, Flora and the rest are laid one stone at a time, each on the same foundation: the intelligence runs on the device, and the data never leaves it. This is not nostalgia for a slower internet. On-device AI is one of the fastest-growing segments in artificial intelligence, and the reason is in the numbers. In one survey of US adults, 92 percent said they would delete an app caught selling their data, and 42 percent had already left a platform or cut their use of it over privacy. Deloitte finds that 67 percent of smartphone users worry about the security and privacy of their data. People have not stopped wanting intelligent software. They have stopped trusting where it runs.
Our ambition is to be the reference for private, on-board Intelligence, and to reach the standard set by the largest companies on the one interface that matters most: the voice. Hey Arri is our own offline wake word. We intend for it to feel inevitable, and to be entirely yours.
The future of intelligence is personal, and it should stay on your phone.
We do not ask you to trust a promise. We remove the need for one. Arritos runs on the device in your hand, never on a server you cannot see. Your photos, your voice, the patterns of a life are read where they live and stay there. Nothing is sold, profiled, or quietly turned into someone else's asset. This is not a setting you enable; it is how the system is built, from the first line to the last.
We hold accessibility to the same standard. Speak to Arritos with the offline wake word Hey Arri, and the product answers with no hands required, no one listening but the device itself. Voice, accessibility, and privacy are not features layered on later. Together they are the product.
Our quarrel is with the extractive model, never with the person using it. We build no dark patterns, harvest no attention, and optimize for no metric that profits from your time.
Privacy by architecture, not by promise.
An agenda is only worth the promises you can check. Ours are deliberately verifiable. On-device first: intelligence runs on the phone, and your data never leaves it. No advertising and no tracking, because we answer to the people who use our software, not to the people who would buy their attention. Voice-first accessibility through Hey Arri, our offline wake word, so an Arritos module can be opened and navigated without a screen in hand, and the internet cut off. Operating under a strict Local Data Act, your data is processed locally and never sold, bartered, or profiled.
We also commit to shipping real products, not announcements. Playlist is live on the App Store and Google Play. Temple arrives in June 2026, the second cornerstone of an ecosystem of roughly thirty modules built patiently over the coming years. We hold ourselves to these standards because, for us, privacy is not a feature to be priced. It is an obligation.
Privacy is not a feature. It is an obligation.
Most policies are written to protect the company. We write ours to limit it. Our governing principle is restraint: we collect what a feature genuinely needs and nothing beyond it. On-device intelligence is the default, not a setting. With Temple, classification runs entirely on the phone and no photo is ever transmitted to us; with Hey Arri, the wake word is recognized offline, so your voice stays with you. Where an account exists, we ask only for what makes the ecosystem work, encrypt it in transit, and never sell or profile it. Our Privacy Policy and Terms are written in plain language, because consent that cannot be understood is not consent. The rights European law grants you — access, correction, portability, erasure — are honored as a baseline, and account deletion is unconditional. These commitments are not marketing copy. They are the operating constraints of the company.
Consent that cannot be understood is not consent.
We are laying stones in a cathedral, and a cathedral is measured in patience, not quarters. Playlist came first: music that rewards listening, on-device, the cornerstone that proved the ecosystem could stand without the cloud. Temple follows in June 2026, sorting a lifetime of photographs across twelve categories without a single image leaving the phone.
After Temple comes Shield, the on-device privacy guardian, with roughly thirty modules to follow over about two years. Each is bound by the same conviction and the same voice, Hey Arri, working entirely offline. GoldenOr carries the chain forward: an in-app reward that opens the next door for those who walk the path. Some modules arrive by another road altogether. Flora, which identifies any plant on-device, is given freely as a yearly gift to the people who stay. Progress here is deliberate. We move at the speed of trust, never faster than craft allows.

The first cornerstone — music that rewards listening, on-device, live on the App Store and Google Play.

The custom offline wake word that gives the whole ecosystem one voice.

An in-app reward earned through use that unlocks each new module in turn.

On-device photo organizer — twelve categories, full voice navigation. Sort once. Sorted forever.

The on-device privacy guardian that isolates your most sensitive photos.

Identify any plant on-device, with nothing sent away.

A cathedral built patiently over about two years, each module on the same principles.