Sessions and account closure
Two related controls in the same place: a list of every device currently signed in to your Claos account, and the two-stage account closure flow if you decide to leave.
Open Settings → Security to find both.
Active sessions
The Sessions section lists every device currently signed in as you. Each row shows:
- Device and browser — parsed from the user-agent string ("Chrome on macOS," "Safari on iPhone," etc.).
- IP address — if available.
- When the session started — relative time ("2h ago," "3d ago").
- A "current device" marker on the session you're using right now.
Revoking a session
Click the revoke action on any session that isn't your current one — that device is signed out immediately. Useful when:
- You used Claos on a public or borrowed computer and forgot to sign out.
- You see a session you don't recognize. (If that happens, change your password too — someone may have it.)
- You're rotating devices and want to be sure old ones are clean.
Your current session can't be revoked from here; to sign out the current device, use the regular sign-out from the user menu.
Closing your account
Account closure has two paths so you don't lose work irreversibly by accident:
- Deactivate. Soft. Hides your profile from every workspace and stops all notifications, but preserves your data. Reversible — sign back in and you're restored.
- Delete permanently. Hard. Starts a 30-day grace period, after which your personal data is removed and your contributions are anonymized.
Both live in Settings → Security → Danger zone.
Deactivating
Click Deactivate Account and confirm in the dialog. You're signed out. To reactivate, sign back in with the same email and password — the deactivation is reversed automatically.
While deactivated:
- Your profile is hidden from member lists.
- You don't receive notifications.
- Comments, tasks, pages, and other work you authored stay in their workspaces.
Deleting permanently
Click Delete Account in the Danger zone. The dialog requires you to type DELETE in an input field to confirm — this is the friction that prevents accidental deletion.
After you confirm:
- Your account is scheduled for permanent deletion.
- You're signed out.
- You have 30 days to change your mind. Sign back in within that window to cancel the deletion.
After 30 days, your account is removed for good — this part is irreversible.
What gets removed vs. preserved
When the 30-day window ends and deletion completes:
- Removed. Your profile (display name, avatar, email, password), your 2FA setup, your account-level preferences, your personal subscription history, your personal-scope integration and messaging-channel connections.
- Preserved. Tasks, pages, comments, and agents you created stay in their workspaces. They're owned by the resource and the workspace, not by you — so the work doesn't disappear when you leave. Your name on those items is anonymized.
If you'd like to revoke third-party access immediately rather than waiting on the 30-day window, disconnect each integration in Settings → Integrations and each linked platform in Settings → Channels before you start the deletion. Removing the local connection cuts Claos's access; revoking the OAuth grant on the third-party app's side (Google account, Slack workspace, Notion, etc.) is the full off-switch.
If you own a workspace
Deleting your account doesn't automatically delete the workspaces you own. Before deletion, transfer ownership to another member or close the workspace explicitly — otherwise the workspace continues operating, just without you.
If you're not sure how to transfer ownership cleanly, contact support before initiating deletion.
Tips and gotchas
- Deactivation is the safer first step if you're not sure. It hides you from teammates without removing anything. You can deactivate, take a few days, and decide.
- Sessions show what's signed in right now, not a history. If you want to audit past sign-ins, that's not a surface this page provides — the right place is a support request.
- Revoking a session doesn't change your password. If the session was unauthorized, change the password too; otherwise the same credentials could be used to sign in again.
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