There is a massive schism happening in creative tech right now. Platforms like Ellipsus have proudly planted their flag with a strict "No Generative AI—ever" stance.
We respect that stance. For many writers, the fear of having their unreleased manuscript scraped by OpenAI, Anthropic, or Google is terrifying. The 2026 lawsuits confirm those fears are valid.
But fear is a terrible way to build the future of software.
The Flaw in the "Anti-AI" Stance
Refusing to integrate AI because you're afraid of data loss is like refusing to use email because somebody might read your letters in transit. It fundamentally misidentifies the problem.
AI is not the enemy.
The enemy is unencrypted telemetry. The enemy is surveillance capitalism. The enemy is terms of service that grant corporations a perpetual license to parse your raw creative output.
Why We Built "Encrypted AI"
At CipherWrite, we are relentlessly pro-author. We believe that if an algorithm can tell you exactly at which page a reader will experience statistically significant narrative fatigue, an author should have access to that tool.
If a writer suffering from dyslexia wants to use an AI Humanizer to ensure their pacing reads fluidly before submitting to a publisher, they should not be shamed or banned by their writing software.
Therefore, the solution isn't to ban AI. The solution is to secure it.
How Zero-Knowledge Changes the Game
Our entire stack runs through Client-Side Zero-Knowledge Encryption. That means when you use the CipherWrite Book Title Generator or have our AI analyze your chapter for pacing constraints, your data is processed entirely Ephemerally (it lives and dies strictly for the context window of the prompt) and is guarded by mathematical encryption keys stored only in your brain.
- We do not log your prompts.
- We do not store your generations in plaintext.
- No model is trained on your drafts. Ever.
We don't need a "No AI" promise because our cryptography physically prevents us from peeking.
Join the Third Path
You don't have to choose between writing in the Stone Age and surrendering your IP to a trillion-dollar tech giant.
Choose the third path. Choose encrypted creativity.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is it safe to use AI for book writing?
It is perfectly safe to use AI for book writing as long as you use a platform protected by zero-knowledge encryption, like CipherWrite. This guarantees your prompts and drafts are not stored in global training datasets.
Why do apps like Ellipsus ban generative AI entirely?
Many collaborative tools like Ellipsus ban generative AI as a marketing stance. However, ignoring AI completely forces writers to abandon powerful analytical tools. CipherWrite solves this by using zero-knowledge encrypted AI—giving authors the benefits of AI without the privacy risks.