Health tech that serves your quality of life, not corporate bottom lines
About Project Biotech: Privacy-First Health Technology
What We Build
We build health technology that improves quality of life without exploiting the people who use it. Your data, your devices, your health—owned by you, not corporations.
Most health tech companies profit from surveillance capitalism — turning your biometric data into their revenue stream, requiring subscriptions to access what's already yours, even demanding their logos on your workout data. We profit from building useful tools. There's a difference.
Why We Build It
Big tech has turned personal health into a commodity to be extracted and sold. The wellness industry profits from manufacturing anxiety. We exist because both industries have the same business model: convince you that you're broken, then sell you the fix. Forever.
We're building tools that help you sleep better, move more comfortably, and understand your body, without becoming a data product. Better sleep. More energy. Less pain. That's quality of life. That's what matters.
How We're Different
Ownership
You own your data. You own your hardware. You own your insights. No subscriptions to access what's already yours. No proprietary lock-in. No data held hostage. Export your data anytime in open formats without corporate branding requirements. This is the foundation of everything we build.
Garmin requires their logo on your workout data. Oura controls how developers can use "your" data through API restrictions. We think your health information shouldn't be a corporate billboard. Own Your Health™.
Privacy as Respect
Privacy isn't a premium feature. It's basic respect for your autonomy. Your biometric data describes your body. That's not a commodity. We don't collect what we don't need, and we never sell what we collect. No third-party trackers. No data harvesting. No subscriptions to access your own information.
When you use Fitbit, your biometric data becomes part of Google's advertising ecosystem. We believe that's fundamentally wrong. Your health data should serve your quality of life, not corporate engagement metrics.
Tracking cookies you'll find on our website:
- ✗ Shopify
- ✗ Microsoft
Honest About What You Need
You don't need constant monitoring to be healthy. You don't need expensive subscriptions to understand your body. Big tech and the wellness industry profit from manufacturing anxiety—track everything, worry about everything, subscribe to everything. We profit from building useful tools. There's a difference.
We build tools that track what affects your quality of life—sleep, energy, mobility, pain. If our free apps are enough for you, great. We're not here to manufacture needs or convince you that you're broken.
The Roadmap
January 2026: Free step counter app. No ads, no tracking. Proving privacy-first health tech is viable.
Q2 2026: Activity monitor that tracks what matters—sedentary time, movement patterns, energy throughout your day. Real insights about quality of life, not gamified streaks.
Q4 2026: Comprehensive health platform. Sleep tracking, workout logs, nutrition. Export your data anytime. Premium features enhance the experience—they don't hold your data hostage.
Q5 2027: Privacy-first wearable. For people who want continuous tracking without the surveillance capitalism. No data sold. No subscriptions for basic features. No corporate logos required on your health information.
Supporting Veterans & Social Good
As a Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business, we partner with the Lift & Shift Foundation to support military veterans through science based recreational programs. By choosing products that respect your autonomy, you're also supporting veterans and STEM students who join these programs.
Tom - Founder
I'm a biomedical engineer and former special operations soldier who got tired of watching big tech turn personal health into a surveillance product.
Started building my own tools during the pandemic. First custom orthotics with a 3D printer, then went off to grad school to learn more. While studying, in the back of my mind was how corporate health tech actually works. I rejected that path intentionally.
If you can track your health without becoming someone else's data product, that matters. If your biometric data doesn't require corporate logos, that matters. So I'm building the alternative.