“About this meeting” — the trust explainer guests see before joining

When someone who's never used Turtini opens a meeting link — a resident handed a board-meeting URL, a customer invited to a call — they often hesitate: "What is this thing? What does it know about me? Is it safe?" Stage answers those questions before they join, so first-timers aren't asked to trust a name they've never seen.

Where it appears:
• On the join screen for any guest meeting, under the meeting title, there's a link: "New to this? About this meeting & your privacy." The screen also shows who's hosting ("Hosted by [organization]").
• Tapping it opens a plain-language explainer — no setup or settings on your part; it's always there for guests.

What it tells them (in everyday words):
• What this is — a video meeting that runs in the browser, with nothing to install and no account required.
• What it collects, and what it doesn't — only the display name they type and, while they choose to turn them on, their mic and camera. It spells out that it does not collect their email, phone, or location, and that Turtini never sells or shares their information. If the host is recording or transcribing, they're told and asked to agree before joining.
• Who's hosting and who's accountable — the hosting organization owns the meeting and its records; Turtini is the secure technology underneath and can't reach into other parts of their life.
• How they're kept safe — everything is encrypted in transit and at rest, each organization's data is walled off from every other, shared images are auto-screened, and Turtini's AI never silently reads or changes data.
• Links to the full privacy policy and security details for anyone who wants the long version.

Why it matters:
• It's legibility, not marketing — every claim matches how Turtini actually works. For audiences like HOA residents who never chose the platform, it's the difference between "I'm not clicking that" and joining with confidence. You don't have to do anything to enable it.