Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

This new Mac app takes your screen hostage until you drink water

Hydration Hostage sits in your menu bar and blocks your screen on a schedule, only unlocking after your camera confirms you took a sip.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Hydration Hostage featured
Pranob Mehrotra / Digital Trends

A new Mac app is betting that the reason your hydration reminders fail is that they are too easy to ignore. Apps like Loook take a gentle approach, nudging you to hydrate alongside reminders for posture and eye breaks. Hydration Hostage takes the opposite stance. Built by a solo developer, the app sits in your menu bar and takes over your screen on a predefined schedule until the camera confirms you actually drank water.

How it works

Hydration Hostage uses Apple’s Vision framework to handle verification. Given that the app requires camera access, the developer has been upfront about the privacy model in a post on Reddit, stating that the frames are processed locally and discarded immediately after, with no analytics layer behind the verification check.

The app offers three enforcement modes to match how much accountability you think you need. Gentle delivers a standard reminder you can acknowledge and move on from. Enforcer requires the camera check before unlocking your screen. Hostage, the most aggressive option, operates on the assumption that you will try to cheat and makes it as difficult as possible to do so, though an Escape key exit is always available for genuine emergencies.

Pricing and availability

Hydration Hostage is available now as a free download with a seven-day full-feature trial, giving you enough time to decide whether the tough-love approach actually works for you. If it does, a one-time license runs $14.99 until June 18, after which the price goes up to $19.99. There is no subscription.

Recommended Videos

Passive hydration reminders have always been easy to swipe away, but Hydration Hostage is built on the premise that the only fix is removing that option entirely and tying screen access directly to whether you followed through.

Pranob Mehrotra
Pranob is a seasoned tech journalist with over eight years of experience covering consumer technology. His work has been…
A network of X accounts is boosting AI nudify tools, raising hell for victims
Researchers say coordinated X accounts are helping AI nudify apps evade moderation and reach more users.
how-to-remove-nudes-deepfake-non-consensual-images

A network of X accounts is pushing AI nudify apps into more feeds, giving abuse-prone tools another route to users while victims fight to contain the fallout.

In a Wall Street Journal report, Graphika senior researcher Matthew Patane said some nudify services are promoted through coordinated social accounts that reuse similar wording. One network included 45,000 X accounts, with posts leaning on indirect phrasing and censored visuals to avoid moderation.

Read more
This free AI Mac app builder turns throwaway prompts into real desktop tools
Ironsmith creates native macOS utilities from plain language, giving Mac users a faster route to small personal apps.
Computer, Electronics, Pc

Ironsmith is a free AI Mac app builder for Mac users with a narrow problem and no patience for the usual developer workflow.

The open source menu bar app, shared by developer Jade Westover, turns plain-language requests into native macOS tools. Its target is the quick desktop helper, the kind of utility built around one personal task that would be hard to find in the App Store.

Read more
TSMC’s latest chip packaging breakthrough promises lower costs and better performance
Analyst Ming-Chi Kuo says the new CoPoS technology could make AI chips cheaper and more powerful.
TSMC Silicon wafer

Making chips smaller has dominated the semiconductor conversation for years, but TSMC's next big leap may come from how those chips are packaged instead. According to analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, the company is developing a new Chip-on-Panel-on-Substrate, or CoPoS, technology that promises lower manufacturing costs while delivering better performance for future AI processors.

TSMC's CoPoS packaging could make future AI chips both cheaper and faster

Read more