Most tools designed to monitor risk rely on alerts. A red banner, a push notification, an urgent email. The thinking is that if something might be wrong, you should be interrupted immediately.
We believe this is a mistake.
An alert is a demand. It breaks your attention and pulls you out of your life, forcing you to react to a situation on the system's terms, not your own. Even when nothing is wrong, the possibility of an alert creates a low-level hum of anxiety. It makes you a passenger in your own safety.
Nilea is not an alarm system. It is a space for quiet reflection.
Instead of pushing information out, it provides a place for you to come in.
A place to see what's happening in your audience, to notice patterns, and to decide what matters — all on your own schedule. The goal is to restore a sense of agency, not to create another stream of notifications that you have to manage.
We don't send alerts because your attention is the most valuable thing you have. You should be the one to decide where it goes.