I’m Kayla, and my camera roll was chaos. Work pics. Family stuff. Gym selfies. A few spicy shots from a lingerie shoot I did for a friend’s small brand. I don’t want those popping up when I’m showing my mom videos of my dog. You get it.
If you're looking for step-by-step guides on tightening up your phone’s privacy settings, Woopid offers a library of easy-to-follow tutorials that can help you keep everything under wraps.
So I tried getnude.app for a full week on my iPhone 14 Pro. I used it every day. I messed with settings. I even tried to break it. Here’s what happened.
Need the blow-by-blow version of my seven-day test? You can skim my unfiltered notes right here.
Setup was fast (like, actually fast)
I downloaded the app, set a six-digit PIN, and turned on Face ID. It took maybe two minutes.
Then it scanned my camera roll. I had 18,432 photos and 811 videos. The first scan finished in about 11 minutes. My phone got warm, but not hot. Battery dropped 7%. Not bad.
It flagged 217 items as “sensitive.” That felt about right. It pulled in:
- My lingerie shoot pics (yep).
- A few bikini photos from Miami.
- A screenshot of a medical bill (nice catch).
- A silly mirror selfie I forgot about.
It missed one blurred video and grabbed a photo of a statue in a museum. So… close, but not perfect. I’ll take that trade.
The vault feels like a vault
When I moved items into the vault, the app asked if I wanted to delete them from my camera roll. I said yes. It also reminded me to clear “Recently Deleted.” That part matters. I liked the little nudge.
Face ID worked each time. I tried a wrong PIN, twice, on purpose. The app locked me out for 30 seconds. It kept a tiny log of failed tries. Not creepy, just helpful.
I also changed the app icon to something boring. That made me laugh. It’s the small things.
Using it day to day
This is where it clicked for me.
- Share Sheet saver: After a spa day, my friend AirDropped a pic. I used the iOS share button and sent it into Nude in two taps. Clean and quick.
- Private camera: I scanned my passport and vaccine card right inside the app. Crisp scans. Auto-crop did fine. I like having those locked away.
- Quick sort: Each night, I’d open the app and check “New Finds.” It grabbed stuff I screenshotted from Instagram stories (why do I screenshot so much?). I either kept it or told the app “not sensitive.” It learned a bit by the third day.
- Side note: I also spent a week experimenting with social-discovery apps to see how their privacy vibes compared; if that sparks your curiosity, here’s how it felt to try a few Wizz-style platforms for a whole week.
While we’re on the topic of keeping risqué media under control, some people opt for Snapchat’s disappearing messages instead of a dedicated vault. If you’re curious about how that sub-culture actually works, the in-depth guide at this Snapchat nudes resource unpacks where those spicy snaps really go, how to find 18-plus creators ethically, and the safety steps you should take before diving in.
And if you ever find yourself in the Lone Star State and want to explore discreet, adult-only meet-ups without the messy guesswork, check out Tryst Texas where you’ll discover curated venue lists, safety checklists, and real-time event intel that make spontaneous connections feel a whole lot more secure.
One small annoyance: big videos took longer to process. While it worked, my phone felt a little sluggish for a minute. Not a deal-breaker, just a heads-up.
Privacy check: does it phone home?
I flipped my phone to airplane mode and ran a small scan on a test album. It still sorted things, which tells me the detection runs on the device. Good sign. For anyone who wants a quick, third-party reputation check, ScamAdviser’s independent report on getnude.app lays out the site’s trust score in black and white.
I didn’t see any auto cloud backup turned on by default. It kept things local for me. That felt safe. (If you’re wondering how a completely different “nudify” app behaves with your data, I ran a no-BS test of a popular free option here.)
If you plan to switch phones, plan ahead though. Don’t wait till the last day with a dead battery and a coffee in hand. I’ve been there.
Real life moments where it helped
- Sharing a dog video with my mom without a jump-scare from a bikini shot. Bless.
- A nosy nephew who swipes fast. He got bored because he couldn’t open the app. Perfect.
- Work demo day: I used my phone over AirPlay. My gallery looked neat, and I wasn’t sweating bullets.
Small thing, but I slept easier. Less “oh no” moments.
What I liked
- It’s simple. No ten-step maze.
- Face ID and PIN both worked fast.
- The Share Sheet flow is clutch.
- On-device feel. It worked even offline.
- The gentle reminders to clear “Recently Deleted.”
What bugged me a bit
- A few false flags (hello, marble statue).
- Big video scans slowed my phone for a bit.
- First scan used more battery than I expected, though only the first time.
- No fancy multi-user mode on my end. I wish I could share a tiny album with my partner with a second PIN. Not a must, but nice to have.
Money talk
I used the free trial first. Then it moved to a paid plan. I’m not listing numbers here because prices change, but think “a couple coffees a month.” I kept it. For my stress level, it’s worth it.
My bottom line
If your camera roll is a mixed bag and you hand your phone to people a lot, getnude.app is a solid fix. It’s not magic, but it is steady. It sorted the messy stuff, stayed out of my way, and didn’t freak me out with weird permissions. Still on the fence? Scroll through the crowd-sourced feedback in the Product Hunt reviews for Nude to see how others have fared.
Would I keep using it? Yes. I already am.
And you know what? I’m showing my mom dog videos again. Zero fear. That’s the real win.