A messaging app engineered around one truth — your conversations belong to no one. Messages are encrypted on device, queued only for delivery, and removed from server queue after delivery.
Messages are encrypted on your device before they ever leave. Not even VOID can read them. We literally can't.
Sign up with just a username. No phone number, no email, no identity tied to your account. You're a ghost.
No analytics, no tracking, no metadata harvesting. We don't know who you talk to, when, or what about.
Messages use direct delivery when possible. If a recipient is offline, encrypted messages are queued only until delivery, then removed from server storage.
Use vault timers for auto-expiring message views. Undelivered server-queued messages are purged after 7 days.
Every line of code is public. Audit it, fork it, verify it. Trust shouldn't be a requirement — it should be provable.
"Finally a messaging app that doesn't ask for my phone number, doesn't mine my data, and actually delivers on its privacy promises. VOID is what Signal wishes it could be."
"I've audited the codebase — the architecture is legit. Device-first encryption with minimal server queueing for offline delivery is the kind of privacy model that actually holds up under scrutiny."
"The invite-only model keeps out spam completely. I got my code from a friend and now our group talks without worrying about screenshots, data mining, or corporate surveillance."
"Switched from Telegram for sensitive work conversations. The auto-expiring messages and zero-metadata approach give real peace of mind. Clean UI too."
"As a developer, I appreciate that everything is open source. I can verify the encryption myself. No trust required — just math. This is how messaging should work."
"My whole team switched after one demo. Messages stay encrypted and only touch server queueing for offline delivery, then they're removed. That's not marketing — it's architecture."
Get the APK, start talking privately. No sign-up walls. No data traps. Just silence.