ScreenJournal vs Controlio
Updated on 6 July 2026
Controlio and ScreenJournal take opposite approaches to work visibility. Controlio typically records screens to a cloud archive, optionally without gaps, logs keystrokes and flags suspicious activity for a manager to review. ScreenJournal reads the work as it happens, writes a plain-English timeline of what was done, and deletes the raw screen data immediately during processing.
What is Controlio?
Controlio is a cloud-based employee monitoring platform. Per configuration it records screens as continuous video, takes periodic snapshots, streams a live view of an employee's screen and logs keystrokes. It tracks website and application usage, supports web filtering and content blocking, and applies behaviour rules that flag suspicious activity. What it captures typically uploads to a cloud dashboard where a manager reviews recordings, keystroke logs and activity reports.
What is ScreenJournal?
ScreenJournal is an AI work visibility tool that reads on-screen work as it happens, turns it into a detailed timeline of what each person actually did, and then deletes the raw screen data. Timelines accumulate into a searchable chronicle of everyone's work history, and from them ScreenJournal generates timesheets and reports automatically and drafts standup summaries on request, answering questions about any of it in plain English.
It keeps no keystroke log in any mode and, by default, no footage; the day becomes a work timeline that reads like a log of the work rather than a recording of the person. The one exception is Evidence Mode, an optional, disclosed insider-threat add-on a company can enable for roles it flags as a data-leak risk.
How is ScreenJournal different from Controlio?
The table compares what each tool captures, what it keeps, and what you get back when you need to know something.
| Controlio | ScreenJournal | |
|---|---|---|
| What it captures | Screen video and snapshots, keystrokes, websites and apps, per configuration | On-screen work activity, read by AI as it happens |
| What it stores | A cloud archive of recordings, keystrokes and activity data | Derived timelines by default; raw screen data is deleted immediately during processing |
| How you get answers | Dashboards, recordings and reports you review yourself | Plain-English answers from the AI chat or MCP |
| Employee privacy | Recording and playback are the design | Personal activity skipped, PII removed, employee redaction that erases the entry entirely, no stored footage by default |
| Searchable history | An archive searchable by date, user or event | A chronicle of the work itself, searchable by meaning |
| Cheating resistance | Input-based activity metrics can be fooled by fake activity | Output-based, so faking activity achieves nothing |
| Best for | Teams that specifically need recordings to review | Teams that want answers about work without keeping footage |
A recording archive only becomes an answer when someone watches it. It also has to be stored, secured and explained to employees, and it is a liability if it leaks. ScreenJournal never builds the archive: the raw screen data is deleted immediately during processing, and what accumulates instead is the work chronicle, a searchable, permission-scoped history of the work itself. A redacted entry is erased entirely and never appears in anyone's search; redaction is unavailable only for roles a company flags as a data-leak risk.
When should you choose Controlio?
Choose Controlio if you specifically need stored recordings: a client or regulator requires playback evidence, or your investigation process depends on reviewing footage and live screens. Its web filtering and content blocking also make it a fit where controlling access to sites matters as much as visibility. Those are real requirements in some environments, and ScreenJournal deliberately does not serve them with a standing archive.
When should you choose ScreenJournal?
Choose ScreenJournal if what you actually want from monitoring is answers: what was done, how long it took, what it should be billed as, and where the risks are. It generates timesheets and reports from the work itself, answers questions in plain English through chat or MCP, and does all of it without keeping footage or keystrokes. Because employees see the same view managers do, can contest scores and can redact personal entries, it works in teams that would push back hard on screen recording. Genuine policy violations still stay visible: data-handling policy events are captured under the team's policy and cannot be hidden by redaction. For the category-level picture, see ScreenJournal vs surveillance suites.
Frequently asked questions
Does ScreenJournal record my screen like Controlio?
By default, no. ScreenJournal reads the screen only to understand the work, then deletes the raw screen data immediately during processing: no video to play back, no snapshot archive to scrub through, only a written timeline of the work. The one exception is Evidence Mode, ScreenJournal's optional, disclosed insider-threat add-on, which retains raw screen footage for roles a company flags as a data-leak risk.
How do I investigate an incident without recordings?
Policy violations are captured and locked: data-handling policy events stay visible to compliance and cannot be hidden by redaction. For roles flagged as a data-leak risk, a company can enable Evidence Mode, the optional, disclosed insider-threat add-on, which retains the raw screen footage as investigation-grade evidence for security review.
Can employees see what is captured about them?
Yes. Employees see the same activity view managers do, can request score changes, and can redact personal entries before a manager sees them. Personal activity is skipped in real time, and anything personal that slips through is hidden automatically.
Whichever camp a tool is in, ask one question: when you need an answer about work, does the tool give you the answer, or give you footage to interpret? Controlio gives you the footage and good tools for studying it. ScreenJournal gives you the answer, and for everyone outside the disclosed Evidence Mode add-on, by the time you read it the footage is already gone.
See the work itself, not screenshots of it
Timesheets, reports and answers from the work your team actually did. Available for Windows and macOS, with Linux and mobile support coming soon.