macOS security

MacBook Security App

A clean menubar workflow for privacy-first MacBook monitoring and instant phone alerts.

WhoTouchedMe gives MacBook owners a focused security layer that is easy to understand, easy to arm, and honest about its limits.

A security app that feels native to macOS

WhoTouchedMe is built around the macOS menubar experience. It is lightweight, visible when you need it, and quiet when you do not. That matters because security software should feel like a control you trust, not a dashboard that demands attention all day.

The app monitors the MacBook itself, while the iPhone and Android apps receive alerts and let you turn off alerts from your phone. That division keeps the product model clear: the Mac is the monitored device, and the phone is the alert and control surface.

  • macOS menubar app
  • iPhone and Android companion apps
  • Instant push alerts
  • Turn off alerts from phone

Privacy-first by design

WhoTouchedMe does not rely on camera recording, microphone access, or cloud footage storage to work. That makes the product easier to explain and easier to trust, especially for people who want a security tool that does one job well instead of a broader monitoring system.

The service only needs operational data such as account identifiers, subscription status, settings, push tokens, and motion-alert telemetry required to deliver the alert experience. That is a narrower privacy surface than products built around media capture or persistent surveillance.

Why the use case is broad enough to matter

A MacBook security app is relevant in offices, libraries, shared desks, travel days, and any place where the laptop stays visible but temporarily unattended. The value is not just theft anxiety; it is the confidence that comes from knowing the machine will tell you when it changes state.

That makes WhoTouchedMe fit a modern macOS workflow. It is not an enterprise endpoint suite, and it is not a camera security product. It is a focused utility for people who want a cleaner answer to a simple question: if someone touches my MacBook, will I know quickly?

Clear limits keep the product credible

The app does not physically prevent theft, recover a stolen MacBook, or replace existing security habits. It depends on the device state, network conditions, and notification delivery. Those realities should stay visible in the product story so expectations remain accurate.

That honesty is part of the premium positioning. A clean security app earns trust by being specific about what it does, what it does not do, and where the user still needs common sense or additional tools.