Status

Current public preview, with boundaries stated plainly.

Oak Keyring is a privacy-first, local-first password manager with a keyboard-driven terminal UI and optional encrypted Google Drive sync. The current public preview is open source and installable, but it is not a stable-release or audit claim.

Product scopeOak Keyring is framed here as a password manager: local encrypted vault, TUI workflow, import/export/recovery paths, and optional encrypted Google Drive sync. The site should not imply hosted password-service functionality or capabilities outside that scope.
RepositoryPublic-facing pages describe architecture and security boundaries at a high level. Source-review and implementation-level claims should only be made where the public repository and release notes support them.
ReleaseThe current public preview points users to Homebrew, npm, and GitHub Release install channels, but it should not describe Oak Keyring as a stable public release or production-ready replacement.
PlatformThe current preview supports macOS Apple Silicon and Intel only. This site should not claim Linux or Windows support.
SigningPreview binaries are unsigned and not notarized, and macOS may require user approval. Self-signed or ad-hoc signed builds should not be described as equivalent to Apple notarization.
Security reviewNo public third-party audit or complete public implementation review is claimed. Security language is limited to the product model: local-first vault ownership, encrypted sync transport, and constrained zero-knowledge claims at the sync boundary.
Public writingWhy, Architecture, Security, and Notes are intentionally public-facing explanations. They should help users understand what the project is trying to protect without exposing private implementation details prematurely.
What would change this pageA stable release channel, published review process, external audit, or broader platform support would all require this status page and the related security claims to be updated.