Privacy First
End-to-end encryption for sensitive data. No hidden profiling, no data selling, no tracking beyond what is needed to run your event. Your attendees' trust is not for sale.
End-to-End Encryption
Sensitive data is encrypted before it leaves the device. Only authorized parties can decrypt it.
No Hidden Profiling
No behavioral tracking, no advertising profiles, no cross-event data mining. Your data stays yours.
Minimal Data Collection
Cordivent only collects what is necessary to provide the service. Nothing extra, nothing hidden.
User-Controlled Data
Attendees manage their own data. Session notes, preferences, and participation are under their control.
Regulation-Ready
Built with GDPR principles: data minimization, purpose limitation, and user consent.
Publish When Ready
Preview your event before it goes live. No data hits the server until you explicitly publish.
Why Privacy Matters for Event Platforms
When attendees register for an event, they are trusting the organizer with their personal information. Most event platforms treat that trust as an opportunity — to build profiles, to sell data to sponsors, to track behavior across events, or to feed advertising algorithms. Attendees often have no idea this is happening because the data practices are buried in lengthy terms of service.
Cordivent takes the opposite approach. Privacy is not a feature added after the fact — it is part of the launch posture. Sensitive data is handled conservatively, and the encrypted account-backup path protects the flows where that implementation is already present.
The data collection philosophy is equally intentional. Cordivent collects the minimum information needed to provide the event platform service. It needs your email to authenticate you. It needs to know which events you belong to so it can show you the right content. It records QR badge scans because that is the engagement feature you opted into. But it does not track your location, harvest your contacts, fingerprint your device, or analyze your behavior for advertising purposes.
For coordinators, this privacy stance is a feature, not a limitation. When you invite attendees to your event, you can honestly tell them that their data is protected. This is increasingly important as people become more privacy-aware and skeptical of digital platforms. An event that respects attendee privacy creates more trust, which leads to better engagement and more willingness to participate in future events.
This philosophy extends to the event creation process. When you are building out your event — adding agenda items, configuring booths, writing descriptions — you can preview everything before publishing. You maintain full control over when your event becomes visible to the world.
Frequently Asked Questions
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See Privacy-First in Action
Open the demo event and explore the platform. Notice what it does not ask for — that is the point.