Meet Zkomi
Zkomi is a health companion. Not a chatbot. Not a tracker. Not an AI assistant that sells your data to someone else.
It was built for people whose health protocols travel. If you cross timezones with medications, peptides, hormones, or supplements, you’ve probably noticed that most tools assume you stay in one place. Zkomi doesn’t. It recalculates your schedule based on where your body actually is — not just what the hotel clock says.
It prepares customs documents. It tracks whether your vials have been exposed to too much heat. It tells you when your protocol is stable and when something needs attention. And it does all of this on your device — nothing leaves your phone, nothing is stored on a server, nothing can be accessed by anyone but you.
The name stands for Zero-Knowledge Optimized Medical Intelligence. Zero-knowledge means the system was designed so that even the people who built it cannot see your data. That’s not a privacy policy. That’s architecture.
Zkomi started at an airport. The founder was standing in Zurich Airport on the way to Davos with melting ice packs and a protocol that no existing tool could manage. She asked: why doesn’t this exist? Then she built it.
Today, Zkomi is part of a small ecosystem — research, verification tools, travel intelligence — all built around the idea that health protocols should survive movement, not break against it.
It’s not for everyone. It’s for people who move. People who cross borders. People whose routines don’t stay still.
If that’s you — welcome. The fox is watching your six.