It watches your own inbox, follows the rules you write in plain English, books what needs booking, logs what needs logging, and replies as you — on your say-so.
It lives on the inbox you already read — following rules you write in plain English, turning mail into calendar events and logs, and replying as you only when you say so.
Every AI email tool so far has asked you to move in: a new client, a new app, a separate address you forward mail to. Fasrad's email assistant does the opposite. It connects to the inbox you already read — your Gmail, Google Workspace, or any IMAP account — and gets to work without changing a thing about how your mail looks. It reads new messages but never marks them read, never moves them, never deletes anything. To your inbox, it's invisible.
What makes it an assistant and not a filter is that it acts. You tell it, in plain English, what you want handled — 'put every hotel and flight confirmation on my calendar,' 'log my Amazon orders to a list,' 'ask me before you reply to anyone at a client domain.' Those become standing rules it applies to every message that lands. A booking email turns into a calendar event with the address and confirmation number. A receipt turns into a row you can total up later. A reschedule you flagged turns into a one-tap question — not a thing you have to remember to deal with.
A morning it has already handled by the time you sit down:
And because it keeps a private, searchable copy of your mailbox, 'do I have a hotel booked in Munich?' or 'what did that contractor quote me last spring?' gets a real answer in seconds — by meaning, not by remembering the exact words you searched a year ago. When it does reply, it sends from your own address, with your signature, only after you approve that message. You delegate your inbox; you don't hand over the keys.
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Your own. It connects to the inbox you already use — Gmail, Google Workspace, or any IMAP account — with an app password. That's the whole point: it manages the mail you actually get, instead of a second address you'd have to forward everything to.
No. It reads your mail read-only. It never marks messages read, never moves or deletes them, and never files anything unless a rule you wrote says to. Your inbox looks exactly as you left it.
It can send as you — from your own address, with your signature — but only after you approve that specific message with a tap. You can also tell it to only ever draft for certain people ('never auto-send to clients'). Nothing goes out silently.
In plain English, like you'd brief an assistant: 'calendar my hotel bookings,' 'log receipts to a list,' 'ask before replying to my boss.' No filters or rules engine to build. You can edit or remove any instruction later — they live alongside your notes.
Yes, if you turn on the searchable copy. It keeps a private index of your mailbox — up to ten years back — and searches it by meaning, so 'the Munich hotel confirmation' finds the right message even when those aren't the words in it. Ask in chat or from the search bar.
Sensitive messages are never surfaced proactively — it fails closed. Routine notifications wait for morning, but anything genuinely time-critical — a same-day change, a cancellation, something that looks like fraud — reaches you right away.
$49/month or $490/year — cancel anytime. That's the whole assistant — inbox, calendar, contacts, search, and the rules — not an email-only add-on. It's in public beta and takes about 4 minutes to connect.
Agents that clear the admin — triage the inbox, follow up after meetings, log expenses, and review documents.