How privacy-first teams use Blink
The architecture and protections are real, illustrated here through representative scenarios.
Protecting sources with zero-knowledge messaging
A cross-border reporting team needed conversations that even a subpoenaed server couldn't reveal. With Blink, servers hold only ciphertext — encrypted data they can't read — and the reverse-PIN duress wipe, which erases everything when a PIN is entered in reverse, protects reporters at hostile borders.
Immortal records for high-stakes approvals
A boutique advisory firm uses transaction messages — tamper-evident, never-expiring records and receipts — to log client approvals, while disappearing messages keep day-to-day chat ephemeral.
Secure coordination in high-risk regions
An aid organisation equips field staff with the anti-keylogger keyboard, screenshot blocking, and remote wipe, so a lost device never becomes a leaked roster.
A locked Space for the C-suite
A leadership group runs sensitive deals inside a guarded, lockable Space with role-based access control (RBAC) and admin-broadcast channels — keys live on-device, not on the server.