Privacy is not a feature you bolt on

Most services treat privacy as a setting you opt into later. We build it in from the first screen, because the parts you hand over you can never take back.

Privacy is not a feature you bolt on

You sign up for something simple. A swap. A payment. By the end you have given away your email, your phone, your name, and a record that outlives the transaction. None of it was needed to move the money.

That is the quiet cost of treating privacy as an add-on. It always arrives too late.

The default decides everything

A privacy toggle buried in settings is not privacy. It is a confession that the default leaks, and that the burden is on you to stop it. Most people never find the toggle. The default is the product.

So the only honest version is the one where the safe path is the easy path. You do not opt into restraint. Restraint is the floor.

What that looks like here

No account to make a swap. No email to see a rate. You see the rate first, then you decide. The exchange fee is shown up front, in plain numbers, before you commit anything.

We ask for the address where you want your funds and not much else. The less we hold, the less there is to lose, leak, or hand over.

Privacy is a UX choice, not a legal one

This is about what we collect, not about what is allowed. "No account" means one less password and one less inbox to breach. It is a smaller surface, on purpose.

We are not selling you secrecy or a way around anything. We are removing a step that was never about the money in the first place.

Why we bother

Data you never collect cannot be sold, subpoenaed, or stolen. The cleanest way to protect something is to not have it. That belief shaped the build before it shaped the marketing.

If you hit a wall, a real person reads support at @swappsy. Not a bot pretending to be one.

Why privacy →