2 min read By NT²
A vault that never needed a US cloud account
You were asked to upload passport scans and bank PDFs to yet another US-hosted app. You wondered why your tenancy proof needs a California server.
17 posts
2 min read By NT²
You were asked to upload passport scans and bank PDFs to yet another US-hosted app. You wondered why your tenancy proof needs a California server.
3 min read By NT²
The contractor finished the sprint six months ago. They are still in your Contacts list. That is not a crisis — but it is a reminder that trust should have an off switch.
3 min read By NT²
Your accountant needs one disclosure once. Your co-founder needs keys all year. Your landlord needs to see digits on your phone, not your whole vault. Those are three different trust relationships — not three names for the same Share button.
3 min read By NT²
If the app will not let you tap Mark verified, that is intentional. Trust in NT² is tied to events that can be checked, not moods that cannot.
3 min read By NT²
They can send to me — why can't I send back yet? That question usually means the trust relationship is only half finished.
4 min read By NT²
You share rent details with your sister every month. You should not have to find her vault identity in a chat thread each time — or paste the wrong person by mistake.
4 min read By NT²
Receive, Store, and Share sound like three product tabs. Underneath them is one chain: identity makes trust possible, trust makes sharing safe, and assets stay structured on your device until you choose to move them.
2 min read By NT²
Both files are encrypted. Both belong to you. They solve different problems—and mixing them up is how people pick the wrong tool in a stressful moment.
1 min read By NT²
Where data lives shapes who can touch it, process it, subpoena it, lose it, or monetize it.
1 min read By NT²
A vault that protects your data should not trap your data. Backup and export are part of the trust model, not an afterthought.
1 min read By NT²
A privacy product should not ask you to accept tracking just to read its privacy promise.
2 min read By NT²
A privacy tool for everyday households cannot price itself like enterprise software and still claim to be for everyone.
1 min read By NT²
A vault can work offline and still offer sync. The difference is whether the cloud becomes the owner of the data or just a blind carrier.
1 min read By NT²
The vault app lives at se.nt2.me: sent to me. The phrase is playful, but the product idea is not.
1 min read By NT²
Most sharing stories focus on the sender. The recipient has a quieter problem: should I trust this file, and where should it go if I do?
7 min read By NT²
Self-sovereign identity sounds abstract. In NT², the practical version is simpler: your vault can prove itself, recover without a help desk, and share under your control while NT² stays blind.
3 min read By NT²
NT² stands for Null Trust². The name is a promise about what we cannot do—even when that is inconvenient for support and onboarding.