Encryption that feels usable
SealSend is designed for people who need private communication without a complicated new workflow. The goal is to make sealed messages and email packages feel natural.
SealSend began with a simple idea from Cristian: private communication should be easy to use, encrypted by default, and tied to identity that users control.
The project combines secure messaging, encrypted email workflows, and ION wallet identity for people who need confidentiality without handing message content or wallet secrets to third parties.
The original mission was email privacy. The current product keeps that mission and brings it into secure mobile messaging and wallet-based identity.
SealSend is designed for people who need private communication without a complicated new workflow. The goal is to make sealed messages and email packages feel natural.
Verified wallet identities help contacts know who they are talking to, while private content remains encrypted and outside SealSend-controlled storage.
Direct chat, group conversations, Gmail workflows, attachments, relay delivery, and ION wallet features are part of one secure mobile experience.
Cristian founded SealSend around a long-running interest in messaging encryption, cloud infrastructure, and products that make security easier to use.
The old About page described Cristian as cloud-savvy and focused on encryption, financial strategy, and growth. That foundation still shapes SealSend: practical privacy, resilient infrastructure, and a product direction that connects secure communication with blockchain identity.
Follow CristianA shorter version of the old About FAQ, updated for the current mobile app.
SealSend is a secure messaging and encrypted email app for private communication between verified wallet identities.
SealSend uses ION wallet identity and blockchain-related status features to support verifiable communication without exposing message content or wallet secrets to SealSend servers.
No. SealSend does not store message content, Gmail data, wallet secrets, recovery phrases, PINs, biometric data, or encryption keys on SealSend-controlled servers.