Reading your activity log.

Five columns, expandable rows, and one thing that surprises people: a daily brief and all its scraping charges are folded into a single row. Open it to see every charge inside.

The log is a receipt, not a summary. Every row is one event that touched your balance, written at the moment it happened — and any row will open up and show you its working.

The five columns

ColumnWhat it holds
ActionWhat ran — Blog article, Compose, Daily brief, Competitor, SEO audit. Underneath it, a small coloured chip names the category it belongs to.
DetailsThe note we stored with the charge, when there is one. Often a dash — most charges don't need one.
WhenHow long ago, in plain words. The exact timestamp is inside the row.
CostWhat it moved. See below.
BalanceWhat you had left immediately after this row. Read down the column and you can trace your month.

Charges, credits and free

The Cost column shows one of three things, and the difference matters:

  • −12 cr, in dark type — a charge. Credits left your balance.
  • +3,000 cr, in green — credits arriving. A monthly refill, an upgrade top-up, a purchased seat, a refund.
  • Free, in grey — the action ran and cost you nothing. Your first brand, your first five competitors on a brand, a first audit, an image rendered on your own key.

A free row is still a real row. It's there precisely so you can prove the thing ran and prove it wasn't billed.

Opening a row

Click any row — or focus it and press Enter — and it expands. Inside:

  • Reference — the internal id of the thing that was charged: the article, the brand, the competitor. This is what support will ask you for.
  • Time — the exact date and time, not "3 hours ago".
  • Balance — written as before → after, so you can see the arithmetic rather than infer it.
  • Tier — on an image row, which render tier it used.
  • A BYOK tag — a small green flag on rows that were logged at zero cost.
// ABOUT THAT TAG

The BYOK tag marks a row that didn't move your balance. It's the right flag on an image rendered with your own key — but you'll also see it on some rows that were free for a different reason, like a first audit or a free competitor. Trust the Cost column, not the tag: if it says Free, you weren't charged.

The daily-brief roll-up

A brief isn't one charge. It's the content it drafted, plus a charge for every social platform it scraped and every competitor blog it fetched — which could easily be a dozen rows for one morning's brief.

So we fold them. Everything belonging to one brief collapses into a single row, badged in pink with the number of charges and the total — 7 charges · 22 cr. Expand it and every member charge is listed underneath, each with its own cost, above the exact time the brief ran.

The headline row shows the brief's own cost; the badge shows the true total for the morning. If you're reconciling a day, the badge is the number you want.

// WHY IT'S BUILT THIS WAY

A brief costing 22 credits is one decision you made — how much to draft each day, and how many rivals to watch. Showing it as one line keeps the log readable, and keeps the honest total in view.

Days, pages and counts

  • Rows are grouped under day headings — Today, Yesterday, then dates.
  • You get 50 rows at a time. Load more appends the next 50; nothing is replaced.
  • The footer reads Showing 50 of 214 while there's more to fetch, and settles to a plain count once everything in the window is loaded.
  • Below 640 pixels the table becomes stacked cards. Same rows, same expansion, same roll-up.
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