Whatping

🔒 MLS · RFC 9420 · server-blind by design

End-to-end encrypted
calls & deal rooms for business

Whatping is private video, screen sharing, recording, and confidential document rooms — encrypted in the browser so the server, the SFU, and we ourselves only ever see ciphertext. Hosted in the EU, or self-host your own.

  • ✓ No plaintext on our servers
  • ✓ EU / Swiss data residency
  • ✓ Self-host option

Proof, not promises

0
plaintext bytes the server can read
RFC 9420
MLS — the IETF messaging-security standard
E2EE
on chat, audio, video and screen share
100%
self-hostable, no vendor lock-in

Everything you need

One product for confidential collaboration

Calls, rooms and chat that assume the network is hostile — because for the conversations that matter, it is.

Encrypted video & screen share

HD calls, multi-party, screen sharing and recording — every track sealed with a key the SFU never sees.

Confidential deal rooms

Spin up an ephemeral room with documents, NDAs, parties and an audit trail. Built for M&A, diligence and legal.

Server-blind chat

In-call and async messaging encrypted end to end. The relay stores ciphertext only — not metadata theatre, real blindness.

MLS group keys

Keys are derived per room from an MLS (RFC 9420) group. Forward secrecy and post-compromise security, not bolt-on PGP.

EU / Swiss residency

Hosted in the jurisdiction you choose. Single-tenant deployments available for data-sovereignty requirements.

Self-host option

Run the whole stack on your own infrastructure — one app server, one database, your SFU. No phone-home.

How it works

The server holds ciphertext. Only the room holds keys.

Identity and media keys are generated and kept in your browser. Each room is an MLS group; message, call and screen-share keys are derived from it. The delivery service and the SFU relay encrypted bytes they cannot read — verified end-to-end, not asserted in a policy doc.

Start a private room in seconds

No credit card to try it. Your conversations stay yours — encrypted end to end, the server never holds a key.