privvote.com is a free, anonymous, encrypted note-sharing service. No account. No tracking. No permanence.
Create Your First NoteFive straightforward steps — from composing your secret to watching it disappear after a single view.
Open the privvote.com editor and type your secret directly, or paste existing text. You can share passwords, personal notes, sensitive links, API keys, or anything you'd never want lingering in an inbox. The editor never auto-saves to a server — your text stays in your browser until you're ready to send.
Before encrypting, dial in your security preferences. Choose how long the link stays alive — from 1 hour to 7 days — or set it to expire after a single view. Optionally add a passphrase so only the intended recipient can decrypt it. Toggle read notifications if you want a silent ping when the note is opened.
Hit the Encrypt & Generate button. Your message is encrypted entirely inside your browser using AES-256 before any data leaves your device. The server receives only ciphertext — it never sees your plaintext. A unique one-time URL is generated and displayed immediately, ready to copy.
Copy the generated link with one click and send it however you like — email, Slack, Signal, WhatsApp, or a direct message. Because the note is already encrypted client-side, the transmission channel doesn't need to be perfectly secure. The link is meaningless to anyone who intercepts it without the optional passphrase.
The moment the recipient opens the link and the note decrypts in their browser, the server row is permanently deleted. Refresh the link, send it again — it doesn't matter. The URL is dead. No archive, no cache, no trace on our servers. Your secret lived exactly as long as it needed to.
No account required. No data retained. Start in seconds.
privvote.com handles the cryptography. These habits ensure you're using it to its full potential — protecting what matters most.
Enable the passphrase option before generating any link that carries sensitive credentials, financial data, or personal information. Share the passphrase through a completely separate channel — such as a phone call or SMS — so that intercepting the link alone is never enough.
Set your self-destruct timer to the minimum time your recipient realistically needs — minutes or hours, not days. A shorter window dramatically reduces the attack surface: a link that expires in 15 minutes is far harder to exploit than one that lingers for a week.
Keep the secret itself — a password, token, or key — entirely separate from any explanation of what it's for or where it goes. If the note is somehow read by the wrong person, stripping context means the raw secret is far less actionable.
Before sending, let your recipient know a secure link is coming their way so they aren't caught off guard or tempted to ignore it. This simple step also helps them spot a phishing attempt if anyone else sends them an unexpected privvote.com link.
Good to know: privvote.com never stores your message after it's been read or expired. No logs, no backups, no recovery. The tips above are your last line of defence before the note is generated — apply them every time.
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