HI-Scanner
The only scanner that knows who you are today.



Version 1.1.0
2, June 2026

HI-Scanner
Most scanners give every user the same answer about the same product. ZAE doesn't.
It reads where your body actually is; your phase, your life-stage, your ancestry, even what touches your skin and for how long — then decides what's safe for you today.
PFAS.
16 hours a day.
Against your most absorbent skin.
"Forever chemicals" don't just live in non-stick pans. They're woven into underwear, leggings, period products, and sleepwear — sitting against your
body for two-thirds of every day. Most scanners only check food.
ZAE checks everywhere it matters.
One brain. Four shelves of your life.
Other scanners pick one aisle and stay there. ZAE scores the same chemical
across all four; food, beauty, household, and clothing through one biological engine. Same PFAS molecule. Different verdict depending on where it touches you.
What makes ZAE's scanner different
Five things every other scanner gets wrong:
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Same chemical. Different shelves.
PTFE in your non-stick pan is the same PTFE in waterproof leggings.
ZAE scores it across both — food, beauty, household, and clothing —
through one engine. You shouldn't need four apps for one molecule.
Polyester underwear hits different than polyester shirts.
Where a fabric touches you matters. A polyester shirt scores one way.
Polyester underwear, sitting against the most absorbent skin on your
body, scores another. ZAE adjusts automatically.
Sleepwear is stricter than daywear.
Chemicals leach through skin about three times faster at night, when
your body is doing its hormonal repair work. ZAE scores your sleepwear
and bedding stricter — because the hours you're not awake matter more,
not less.
Some combinations don't get a second chance.
PFAS in period underwear. Fluorine signal on a baby blanket. These
trigger an automatic critical verdict. No override. No "but it's
99% safe." Some lines are absolute.
Manufacturers can't hide PFAS by renaming it.
Every six months, chemical companies invent a new acronym for the same
forever chemical. ZAE catches it by structure, not by name. If it looks
like PFAS, ZAE flags it as PFAS — no matter what the label says.