Trust & Transparency
abbox shows how much a website is actually used — publicly, simply, and without invading privacy.
What does “Active Users” mean?
Active Users represent the number of real people who loaded a website within a given time period. abbox counts usage based on anonymous browser activity — not accounts or identities.
Metric definitions
- DAU — unique browsers in the last 24 hours
- WAU — unique browsers in the last 7 days
- MAU — unique browsers in the last 30 days
- YAU — unique browsers in the last 365 days
How counting works
- Visits are recorded automatically when a page loads
- Each browser is counted at most once per site within a short time window
- Rapid refreshes and obvious abuse are ignored
- Usage is aggregated to show trends, not individuals
What we count
- Page loads
- Anonymous browser activity
- Usage trends over time
What we do not count
- Accounts or logged-in users
- Names, emails, IP addresses, or identities
- Advertising or tracking cookies
- Cross-site tracking
Privacy-first by design
abbox does not use cookies, fingerprint users, or track people across websites. All measurements are anonymous and limited to a single site.
Why this data is public
abbox exists to make website usage more transparent — for visitors, founders, partners, and investors. Public usage signals help people better understand how actively a product is used.
Limitations
Numbers are approximate and designed to reflect real human activity, not to be perfectly exact. Bot detection is intentionally simple and improves over time. abbox favors honesty and transparency over precision and opacity.