ANONYMITY REALITY CHECK
Most “anonymous” survey tools still track people.
Wellness Pulse doesn’t.
Scan this board like an airport security screen. If a platform collects IPs, cookies, logins, or identifiers, it is not end‑to‑end anonymous—no matter what the marketing page says.
The Ultimate Test: Ask Your Provider This Question
"If tomorrow the government forces you to tell us who responded to what question, can you do it?"
Focus on the red dots and “NO / MIXED” badges—those are the silent identity leaks: IP logs, cookies, login links, and response‑level identifiers.
No Google logins, no cookies, no personal IDs, IPs hashed one‑way.
Nothing to tie a response to a person.
You can’t accidentally turn anonymity off.
Default: IPs & metadata collected unless explicitly disabled.
Unique URLs can reveal exactly who responded.
A single mis‑click in settings breaks anonymity.
Back‑end IP retention and metadata remain.
Creators can match responses back to invitees.
Provider staff can access identifiable logs.
Universities explicitly warn: not truly anonymous.
Most “internal” forms run while logged‑in.
Ad‑driven telemetry and account data remain.
User accounts and HRIS data sit at the core.
“Confidential” ≠ anonymous; manager views depend on identity.
The system is built to know who each response belongs to.
- IP logs + device fingerprints + timestamps are enough to single someone out in a small team.
- Per‑user survey links or SSO mean responses can be tied back to named people—forever.
- “We don’t show you the IP address” is not the same as “we never collect it.”
How We Guarantee Anonymity
Our architecture is designed from the ground up to be truly anonymous. Even if someone tried to trace responses, there's no trail—because we never collect identifying data in the first place.
The Truth: What Each Platform Actually Collects
See exactly what data flows through each system. The difference is stark.
This board summarizes how common EX and CX tools handle identifiers—IP addresses, cookies, logins, and survey links—based on published product behavior and documentation at the time of writing. For a deeper narrative on why Wellness Pulse is architecturally anonymous, read True Anonymity in Employee Feedback: Why Wellness Pulse Stands Alone.
Verify details with each vendor’s privacy and security documentation
- Qualtrics — Trust Center
- SurveyMonkey — Privacy Notice · Anonymous responses (help)
- Google Workspace / Forms — Google Privacy Policy
- Jotform — Security
- No IP addresses - We never see them
- No cookies - Zero tracking cookies
- No login required - Anonymous by design
- No device fingerprinting - Can't identify you
- No email addresses - Not collected, not needed
- No Google login - Google tracking avoided entirely
- IP addresses logged - Can identify location
- Tracking cookies - Follows you across sites
- Login often required - Links to your identity
- Device fingerprinting - Unique device ID created
- Email sometimes required - Personal identifier
- Google login often required - Tracks you across Google services
This reflects our best understanding as of 2026 from public documentation and customer reports; practices can change. If something looks out of date, contact us and we’ll update it.