How privacy-first teams use Blink

The architecture and protections are real, illustrated here through representative scenarios.

Illustrative personas. To honour the privacy we sell, we don’t publish named customers. The scenarios below are representative examples built around Blink’s real, shipped capabilities — not specific organisations.
Investigative newsroom

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.

Private wealth & legal

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.

Field NGO

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.

Executive team

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.