Quick Meet is an iMessage extension that lets you create Google Calendar events and share Google Meet links directly from iMessage. This policy explains what data the app accesses, how it is used, and how it is stored.
Quick Meet requests access to your Google Calendar via OAuth in order to create calendar events on your behalf. The app also accesses your iOS Contacts to let you pick attendees by name when composing an invite.
The specific Google API scope used is calendar.events, which allows the app to create events. The app does not read, list, modify, or delete existing events.
Your Google OAuth credentials (access token and refresh token) are stored locally on your device in the iOS Keychain. They are never transmitted to any server operated by Mason Earl or any third party outside of Google's own authentication endpoints.
No event data, attendee emails, or personal information is stored outside your device or sent to any external server.
Quick Meet does not share any data with third parties. The only external service the app communicates with is Google — to authenticate your account and to create calendar events via the Google Calendar API.
The app uses the following Google API scope:
https://www.googleapis.com/auth/calendar.events — Used solely to create new calendar events when you tap the Create button. No other calendar data is accessed.
The app requests access to your iOS Contacts to display a contact picker when adding attendees to an event. Contact data is read on-device only and is never stored, logged, or transmitted.
Quick Meet does not use any analytics, crash reporting, or tracking SDKs. No usage data is collected.
You can revoke Google account access at any time by visiting myaccount.google.com/permissions and removing Quick Meet from the list of connected apps.
Questions about this privacy policy can be directed to hi@masonearl.com.