🔒 Privacy Policy

Last updated: April 29, 2026

Your privacy matters to us. Here’s a plain-English explanation of how Smiling Pages handles your data — on the website and in our iOS app — with no legal jargon, just the facts.

🌐 Website (smilingpages.com)

Who we are

Smiling Pages Recipes is a free recipe website available at www.smilingpages.com. We publish over 100,000 recipes for home cooks everywhere. The site is operated by an individual based in the United States.

What data we collect

Server logs. Like every website, our server automatically records standard access-log information each time you visit: your IP address, browser type (user-agent), the page you requested, the referring URL, and a timestamp. These logs are kept for security and debugging purposes and are not linked to any personal identity. They are retained for up to 90 days, after which they are automatically overwritten.

Votes (recipe upvotes). When you upvote a recipe we record a one-way hash of your IP address (SHA-256 with a server-side salt). This is a one-way operation — we cannot reverse the hash to find your original IP address. We use this solely to prevent the same person from voting on the same recipe multiple times.

ComentΓ‘rios. If you leave a comment on a recipe, we store:

We do not require an email address or any other contact information to comment.

Session cookie. We use a single PHP session cookie to enforce rate limits on comment submissions. This cookie does not contain any personal information and expires automatically when you close your browser. We do not use this cookie for tracking or advertising.

YouTube video embeds. Some recipe pages include YouTube videos embedded directly on the page. When those videos load, YouTube (operated by Google LLC) may set its own cookies on your device and collect usage data according to its own policies. Please see Google’s Privacy Policy for details.

Google Fonts. We load typography (Nunito and Lato fonts) from Google’s font servers at fonts.googleapis.com. When your browser requests these fonts, Google receives your IP address and browser information. See Google’s Privacy Policy for more information.

What we do NOT do (website)

Cookies

Here is a summary of the cookies that may be present when you use this site:

We do not set any persistent tracking or advertising cookies ourselves. You can manage or block cookies through your browser settings. Note that blocking our session cookie may prevent comment submission.

Third-party services (website)

Smiling Pages Recipes uses the following third-party services. When you interact with them, their own privacy policies apply:

📱 iOS App (Smiling Pages for iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, Vision Pro, Mac Catalyst)

TL;DR. No account required. No advertising or analytics SDKs. Camera images, microphone audio, photos, and Apple Health data are processed on your device only and never reach our servers. Optional cloud sync flows through your iCloud, not ours. Optional cloud-AI features (v1.7+) prompt you before each call and show you exactly what is sent.

What we do NOT do (app)

Data the app processes on your device

These are processed entirely on your device using Apple frameworks. They never reach our servers.

WhatWhyApple framework
Camera frames during pantry barcode scan Decode UPC/EAN barcodes DataScannerViewController (Vision)
Photos picked from your library Identify foods in pantry photos VNClassifyImageRequest (Vision)
Microphone audio during cooking voice commands Recognise “next step”, “set timer”, … SFSpeechRecognizer (on-device)
OCR of pasted recipe images (v1.7) Convert image-of-recipe to structured ingredients/steps VNRecognizeTextRequest (Vision)
Health data (read) Filter recipes by your dietary preferences and allergens HealthKit
Health data (write) Log a cooked meal as nutrition + macros, only when you tap “Log it” HealthKit

The first time the app needs camera, microphone, photo library, speech recognition, calendar, or HealthKit access, iOS will show a native permission prompt. Tapping Don’t Allow simply disables the dependent feature; the rest of the app keeps working.

Data the app sends to remote services

Public recipe API. Anonymous read-only HTTP requests to https://www.smilingpages.com/api/*. These fetch recipe content (titles, ingredients, steps, images). They contain no personal identifiers — only the recipe slug, search query string, or ingredient list you chose to look up. Standard server access logs apply (90-day retention, no linking to identity, see Website section above). The User-Agent header includes the app version and platform (SmilingPages-iOS/1.0) so we can debug field issues. We do not record this to any per-user store.

Open Food Facts (barcode lookups). When you scan a barcode the UPC/EAN is sent to openfoodfacts.org. Open Food Facts is an independent third-party operated under the Open Database Licence. The request contains the barcode number only.

iCloud (CloudKit) — your account, not ours. If you are signed in to iCloud and have iCloud Sync enabled in Settings, your cookbook, shopping list, meal plan, pantry, and family group sync between your devices through Apple’s CloudKit. CloudKit data flows through your iCloud account — we cannot read this data. The app uses two CloudKit private databases:

You can disable cloud sync at any time in Settings → iCloud Sync; the app falls back to a local on-device store with no functional loss.

Family Sharing (CKShare). When you create or join a family group, the app uses Apple’s CKShare to coordinate identity (display names, emoji avatar, role) between family members you have explicitly invited. The invite link is a single-use iCloud share URL; you control who you send it to. We never receive the share URL or the family roster.

Sign in with Apple. When you create a creator profile (v1.4+) or accept a recipe authoring invite (v1.7+), the app uses Sign in with Apple. Apple gives us either your real Apple ID email or a randomised relay address — your choice. We use this only to issue a creator handle, stored in your iCloud private database, not on our servers.

Push notifications. If you enable cooking-timer or family-coordination push notifications, your APNs device token is sent to Apple’s push servers. We do not use third-party push providers. Push payloads contain only the timer name or family event title.

Optional cloud AI (v1.7+). A small number of features (smart recipe authoring, meal-plan generator, photo-to-recipe, conversational follow-up) can route through a cloud language model when the on-device model is insufficient. Before any cloud call:

  1. The app shows you exactly what payload will be sent.
  2. You tap Send explicitly. If you cancel, no call happens.
  3. We never send Apple Health data, cookbook history, family roster, or device identifiers to a cloud LLM.
  4. The provider returns the response; we do not retain it on our servers.

We use Anthropic Claude (routed through Replicate) for multimodal and long-context calls; on-device calls use Apple Foundation Models. The audit log is on-device and visible to you in Settings → AI Activity.

StoreKit 2 (Pro subscription). Subscriptions for the optional Pro tier flow through Apple’s StoreKit. We receive a transaction receipt confirming the purchase, but not your Apple ID, payment method, or billing address. Apple manages your subscription; we cannot.

Apple App Privacy report (App Store nutrition label)

The Privacy “nutrition label” filed in App Store Connect declares:

The Apple Developer Program member of record is the team identified by Apple Team ID Z92WJTP2S4.

§ Shared sections (apply to website and app)

Data retention

Your rights

Even without user accounts, we respect your ability to manage the data you have knowingly submitted:

EU/UK/EEA residents have the rights described in the GDPR (access, rectify, erase, restrict, portability, object). California residents have the rights described in the CCPA / CPRA. Because we hold no per-user account data and do not sell or share personal information, most data-subject requests resolve to "no data on file" — but if you have submitted a comment, the comment-removal path above applies. Contact us via the website footer.

Children’s privacy

Smiling Pages is a general-audience recipe service and is not directed at children under the age of 13. We do not knowingly collect personal information from children under 13. If you believe a child has submitted personal information to us, please reach us through the website and we will delete it promptly.

The iOS app is rated 4+ and the “Kids Mode” toggle in family settings hides recipes flagged with the mature content tag (alcohol, etc.) from child-bound profiles; this preference is stored in your iCloud private database only.

International users

The app is available worldwide through the App Store. The website is available worldwide. Localised in: English, Spanish, French, German, Portuguese, Italian, Japanese, Simplified Chinese (additional locales on the website).

Changes to this policy

We may update this Privacy Policy from time to time. When we do, we revise the “Last updated” date at the top of this page. If we materially change how the iOS app processes data, the app will surface the change in Settings → What’s New at next launch. Continued use of the website or app after changes are posted constitutes your acceptance of the updated policy.

Contact us

Have a question about this policy or want to make a data request? We’re happy to help.

🌎 Website: www.smilingpages.com
Reach us via the feedback link in the footer, or by writing to the address on our About page. App users can also use the “Report a Privacy Concern” link in the App Store record.