The hardest feature to build wasn't the encryption. It was teaching software that "Bob" and "Robert" are the same person.
Add a document, the facts flow into one always-current "this is me." The messy human details are most of the work — and the whole point.
We all do it — text the streaming login, the account your mom can't get into.
Ten-second fix. Then it lives in that thread forever, plain text, for years.
Sharing access is normal. We're building Simply Once so it never lives in the thread. Share the access, not the artifact.
Designing for the whole world is humbling.
Same data, but dates, units, and the way an address is written change everywhere. What's obvious in one place is wrong in the next.
A global product isn't one product. It's the same data shown the way each person already expects.
Freelancer math: 14 client logins, 3 invoicing tools, a W-9 you've re-sent 40 times, contracts in whichever inbox.
You're the IT department AND the filing cabinet.
Put your work life in one place. Share the right thing in a tap.
https://t.co/IlsfNvjNdJ
A new phone should feel like an upgrade. Instead it's an afternoon locked out of your own life — the authenticator that didn't move, the logins you can't recall.
Your keys belong in a vault you can open from anywhere. Not trapped on one fragile device.
https://t.co/yrRrnD5VEu
A breach notification lands for a service you forgot you ever signed up for.
How many accounts do you even have? 50? 200? You can't protect what you can't see.
One private place that knows every login — so you can finally shrink the footprint.
https://t.co/Gzm193zoyr
You are not your passwords.
You're your license, your insurance, your kids' records, the forms you re-type forever — scattered across forty databases that each own a piece of you.
We're building the one home your whole identity lives in. Passwords too, free — just the floor.
Helping an aging parent, you realize no one knows the full picture — not even them. Which banks, which logins, the auto-payments to things they forgot.
One private place for a whole life's accounts — theirs to keep, yours to help with when it counts.
https://t.co/pB5ShtnQgt
250 years ago, a few people declared that your life is yours to govern.
To those who fought to win that freedom — and those who still serve to protect it — thank you.
Happy 250th, America. 🇺🇸
Most of the free apps on your phone are paid for with your data.
We built a family-centric vault where we can't see yours even if we wanted to — and we don't.
It's your data. You own it. Not the company.
https://t.co/bhFvhefIRD
You're not quite the same person at your job, on a side project, and signing up for an app you'll use twice.
One core identity, the right face per context. Same you, different front door.
https://t.co/FtTm6M91eP
The new-doctor clipboard: current meds and doses, allergies, past surgeries, family history, insurance again.
You fill it from memory, half-guessing.
Your health history shouldn't live in your memory and a tote bag of folders. One private place, ready when it counts.
When we say zero-knowledge, we mean it literally.
We can't read your data. Not for support, not to "improve your experience," not under subpoena. The keys are yours.
Most companies say "we won't look." We built it so we can't.
https://t.co/JjUMB2igqK
Every company re-collects the same info you've given a hundred times — name, address, DOB, license — typed into another form, stored in another database that can leak.
Onboarding should be a connection, not a clipboard: bring your own verified data, share only what's needed.