anyspace is a social network with the privacy of Signal. End-to-end encrypted messages, communities that stay yours, and a server that genuinely can't see what you say.
"Trust us, your chats are safe." Encryption that's off by default.
Encrypted by default. We can't read messages even if we wanted to — or were forced to.
Privacy you have to trust isn't privacy. Ours is built so trust isn't required.
Every message, call, and post is encrypted on your device. The server only ever sees scrambled bytes.
Sign up without handing over your identity. No phone number, no email, no real name required.
Our infrastructure is built so your IP isn't stored or tied to your account. We can't leak what we never keep.
Build spaces, run group chats, and gather around what you love — all under the same encryption.
No single server holds the keys to your conversations. The network keeps working without a central point of control.
Our protocol and client are built to be inspected. Check our claims instead of taking our word.
The strongest privacy promise is the one a company can't break. anyspace is built so that even we can't betray you.
When you sign up, your encryption keys are generated and stored on your phone — never on our servers. Without them, your messages are unreadable.
Messages are encrypted before they leave your device. What reaches anyspace is meaningless scrambled data we have no way to decrypt.
No email, no phone number, and no IP logging means there's no profile of you to build, sell, or surrender.
If someone demands your data, we can only give what we have: encrypted bytes and no keys. The privacy holds even under pressure.
The apps people trust most with their secrets are the ones least built to keep them. We thought a social network could do better than “trust us.”
Telegram built a reputation on privacy, but its default chats aren't end-to-end encrypted and its servers hold the keys. The gap between the promise and the proof is where trust quietly breaks.
anyspace closes that gap. Encryption is on by default, the server is blind by design, and the protocol is meant to be verifiable — so you don't have to take our word for any of it. That's the only kind of privacy worth shipping.
Private social, by default. Available now on Windows — with macOS and mobile on the way.