Women Safety

Women's Safety in the US & Audra

2 women killed weekly. The US has the laws — now it has Audra, the privacy-first safety app built for the moment hands are shaking.

By Kenneth MelchorJanuary 13, 20256 min read
Women's Safety in the US & Audra

Two women are killed by a current or former partner every week in the United States. Not every year. Every week. Since records began, this number has barely moved.

The United States has some of the most progressive domestic abuse legislation in the world. The Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) was a landmark moment — broadening the legal definition of abuse, recognizing children as victims in their own right, and introducing protective orders. Domestic violence and coercive control are serious crimes. Organizations like the National Domestic Violence Hotline, Refuge, and SafeNetwork have built a support infrastructure that is the envy of many nations.

And still. Two women every week.

The Reality Behind the Statistics

According to the National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey (NISVS), an estimated 4.5 million women experience severe intimate partner violence each year in the United States. Of those, a significant percentage experience coercive control and threats. And that is only what was reported or captured in surveys. The true number is believed to be significantly higher — because only 18% of domestic abuse victims ever contact the police.

Why don't women report? The reasons are complex and devastating:

And then there is the everyday fear that has nothing to do with intimate partners. 73% of women in American cities report feeling unsafe walking alone at night, according to recent surveys. Public transportation, parking lots, walking home after a late shift — these are not abstract worries. They are daily calculations every woman in America makes.

What the Law Cannot Do

VAWA is good law. The problem is that no law can protect a woman in the 60 seconds when something goes wrong and her hands are shaking.

Law operates on timescales of hours, days, courts, processes. Violence operates on timescales of seconds. There is a gap — a terrifying, potentially life-ending gap — between what legislation promises and what happens in the moment a woman needs help.

Police response times in the US average 10-12 minutes in urban areas and significantly longer in rural regions. In many situations, 10 minutes is too long.

What has been missing is not more legislation. What has been missing is the right tool.

Audra: Built for the Moment That Matters

Audra — a word meaning Storm and Noble Strength — is a personal safety ecosystem built specifically for that gap. It is designed for the worst-case scenario: when the phone is locked, when hands are shaking, when there is no time to open an app.

Launching now in the United States — Audra is built for American legal requirements and US-based infrastructure — the app activates through a single discreet gesture. Press the volume buttons in a set sequence. That is it. No unlocking. No typing. No visible action for anyone standing nearby.

The moment you trigger it, Audra executes five actions simultaneously:

  1. High-frequency siren — maximum volume that bypasses silent mode to alert bystanders
  2. Live GPS streaming — real-time location sent to your trusted Guardians
  3. Black Box Recording — audio captured and streamed instantly to secure cloud storage — even if the phone is destroyed, the evidence is already safe
  4. Global SMS alerts — automated messages to Guardians regardless of local carrier conditions (Phase 2)
  5. Stealth and Duress Modes — the screen disguises itself as a calculator; a Duress PIN allows you to appear to "deactivate" the app for an attacker while it continues recording and tracking invisibly

That last feature is not science fiction. It exists because in some situations, a woman being forced to unlock her phone is the most dangerous moment of all. Audra has an answer for that.

Privacy First. Always.

In a world where apps monetize everything, Audra is built on a different principle: your safety data belongs to you — and only you.

Audra does not track your location in the background. It does not record audio passively. It does not build a profile of your movements or behavior. The only data collected is what you explicitly trigger during a safety event.

When data is captured:

This is privacy compliance not as a checkbox — but as a founding principle. In the US, where data rights are increasingly protected, Audra was designed to be the safety app you can trust with the most vulnerable moments of your life.

87 Tests. Zero Tolerance for Failure.

The SOS engine — the core of what makes Audra work — has been validated with 87 automated tests ensuring it never fails. Because a safety app that sometimes does not work is not a safety app. It is a false promise.

Audra runs on both iOS and Android. It integrates with Apple Watch, allowing the SOS trigger from your wrist — with no need to reach for your phone. The UI is fully built. The core features are finished. This is not a prototype. This is a product ready to be in the hands of women who need it.

Don't Give Up

To every woman in the US reading this who knows what it feels like to map the safest route home, to hold your keys differently, to silence a notification so no one knows you reached out for help:

This is for you.

The system has let too many women down for too long. But the silence is ending. The technology now exists to close the gap between the law and the moment. And it is built to protect you — not to surveil you, not to monetize you, not to expose you further.

Audra is launching in the United States now. You deserve to feel safe. You deserve a tool that fights for you even when you cannot speak.

Don't give up. Help is here. And it was built for you.

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Download Audra | Available on iOS and Android

Audra is a US-based social enterprise. Mission and assets are locked to the community — not to investors.

If you are in immediate danger, call 911. National Domestic Violence Hotline: 1-800-799-7233 (free, 24/7).

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Audra and how does it work?
Audra is a privacy-first personal safety app designed for women. It activates via a volume button shortcut — no need to unlock your phone. Once triggered, it sounds a high-frequency siren, streams live GPS to your emergency contacts, and records audio and video to a secure cloud — all within seconds.
Is Audra safe to use in domestic abuse situations?
Yes. Audra includes stealth mode that hides the app from the home screen and app list, plus a duress PIN that opens a fake interface if someone forces you to unlock. No background tracking occurs — your location is only shared when you explicitly trigger an alert.
How does Audra protect user privacy?
Audra follows a privacy-first design: no background location tracking, no data sold to third parties, end-to-end encryption for all transmitted data, compliant with US privacy laws, and all data stored within US servers. The app only activates when the user triggers it.
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Audra

Global safety for women. Privacy-first. Available on iOS & Android.

Download Audra