saymineapp.com
What saymineapp.com is today (and why it matters)
If you type saymineapp.com into a browser right now, it redirects to saymine.com and lands you on Mine’s main site, which presents MineAPP for individuals alongside MineOS for organizations.
That redirect is more than a technical detail. It’s a signal that saymineapp.com is essentially an “entry” domain people may still have from old links, ads, app-store trails, or past press mentions, but the product story and navigation now live under the saymine.com brand experience.
There’s also a second important “today” fact: the page Mine uses for its consumer app messaging states that the SayMine consumer app is now part of McAfee. And in November 2025, MineOS published a detailed note saying its consumer privacy application was acquired by McAfee, while MineOS continues independently with an enterprise focus.
So when someone says “saymineapp.com,” they might mean:
- the historical consumer privacy app experience (“SayMine” / MineAPP), and/or
- the current Mine brand site that now funnels visitors to MineAPP and MineOS pages.
What MineAPP actually does (the core workflow)
Mine positions itself as a personal data management assistant: it helps you figure out which companies likely have your data, and then helps you send requests to delete that data where you don’t want it kept anymore.
The key workflow is usually described in three stages:
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Discovery (building your “digital footprint”)
Mine’s help docs describe a “non-intrusive” discovery approach that reconstructs your footprint by scanning your email history and looking at things like sender, subject lines, and frequency of interactions to identify services you’ve used. It explicitly says it does this without collecting your email messages. -
Understanding what those companies collect
Mine says its AI can locate and scan companies’ privacy policies to determine what kinds of information those services collect about users. This is meant to turn a raw list of company names into something more actionable (what data types might be involved). -
Reclaiming (sending deletion requests)
Mine uses the term “Reclaim” for initiating a data deletion request. Their help center frames this as exercising “the right to be forgotten” style deletion, with a practical warning: if you reclaim from a service you still rely on (Spotify is the example), your account and associated data can be gone, so you may want to save anything you care about beforehand.
They also describe how the sending mechanics work in a way that’s easy to miss: you view and manage the request inside Mine, but the deletion-request email is sent from your own inbox (your personal email address), and you can verify it in your “Sent” folder once it’s active.
What data Mine says it collects (and what it says it doesn’t)
Any service that touches your email account raises a fair question: “Okay, what exactly are you taking and storing?”
Mine’s help documentation lists the personal information it says it holds as the minimum needed for the app to function, including:
- your email address and full name
- the companies identified in your footprint
- the count of email interactions with each
- and, if you have a premium subscription, credit card information
It also states it never sells your personal data.
On the “what it doesn’t do” side, Mine’s technology explainer says it reconstructs the footprint from email history signals like subject lines and sender patterns, and does so without collecting email message content. That distinction is basically the core trust argument of the product: useful visibility, without turning into a full inbox reader.
Where data is stored and what security claims are made
Mine’s help center says its servers are located in the EU “to meet all GDPR guidelines.”
It also claims it has passed external security assessment work that includes penetration testing by Bishop Fox, and that it completed Google’s OAuth API verification and external security assessment audit.
Those statements don’t automatically mean “risk-free,” but they’re meaningful because they point to:
- a defined hosting region (EU)
- and specific third-party verification/assessment language rather than vague “bank-grade security” marketing.
Pricing: what’s known (and what’s intentionally vague)
Mine’s help center has a straightforward answer to “Is Mine free?” that’s honest but not very specific: it describes a business model that includes a subscription “for a few dollars per month,” and says premium has been rolling out country by country.
So if you’re trying to pin down an exact global price list from the official help content, you won’t get one there. The best practical takeaway is that Mine has historically operated with a free entry and paid tier approach, and availability can vary by region.
(And just to prevent a common mix-up: there’s also a separate company using usemine.com that’s focused on finance/credit products and has its own consumer privacy notice. That’s not the same property as saymineapp.com / saymine.com.)
The McAfee shift: what changed in late 2025
This is the biggest “recent history” point around saymineapp.com.
- Mine’s consumer app page states the SayMine consumer app is now part of McAfee.
- MineOS published an announcement dated Nov 24, 2025 saying its consumer privacy app was acquired by McAfee, while MineOS remains independent and focused on enterprise privacy, risk, and AI governance.
- Separate reporting also described the transaction and the intent to integrate the consumer app into McAfee’s ecosystem.
What this means for an everyday user is pretty simple: if you originally found the product through saymineapp.com, you’re now looking at a brand that has (at minimum) reorganized ownership and positioning of the consumer app inside a larger security company context, while the original company (MineOS) keeps going on the enterprise side.
If you’re evaluating whether to use it now, the practical questions become:
- Where does the consumer functionality live in McAfee’s lineup?
- What changes in data handling, support, billing, or account management might come with that transition?
- Does the product still work the way the older Mine help-center docs describe?
The official pages confirm the shift, but some operational details may depend on how McAfee integrates the feature set over time.
Key takeaways
- saymineapp.com currently redirects to saymine.com, acting like an alternate entry point rather than a separate product site.
- MineAPP is built around discovering your footprint from email metadata signals and helping you send data deletion requests (“Reclaims”).
- Mine says it doesn’t collect email message content, and it lists a relatively small set of data it stores to run the service.
- Mine states its servers are in the EU and references external security assessments and Google OAuth verification/audits.
- In late 2025, the consumer app business was described as acquired by McAfee, with MineOS continuing independently on the enterprise side.
FAQ
Is saymineapp.com different from saymine.com?
In practice today, it behaves as a doorway: visiting saymineapp.com sends you to saymine.com.
What does Mine need access to in order to work?
Mine’s onboarding and technology explanations describe signing in with an email provider so it can analyze signals like sender and subject lines to identify services in your footprint.
Does Mine read my emails?
Mine states it reconstructs your footprint using metadata signals (like subject lines and sender patterns) and does this without collecting your email messages.
What is a “Reclaim”?
A Reclaim is Mine’s term for initiating a data deletion request toward a company in your footprint, and Mine warns that deletion can remove accounts and data you might still want.
What’s going on with McAfee and SayMine?
Mine’s consumer app page says the SayMine consumer app is now part of McAfee, and MineOS published a Nov 24, 2025 announcement that its consumer privacy app was acquired by McAfee.
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