Free
Anonymous text-only sharing for occasional secrets.
USD 0- Text secrets
- Short TTL
- View limits
- No opening codes
How it works
Shhhs separates creation, delivery, opening, request intake, vault reuse, and Team operations so each handoff has the right amount of control.
Paste text or attach a file, choose TTL and views, and optionally require an opening code. Free stays simple; paid packages unlock files and stronger controls.
Send the generated link through the channel you already use. Messaging previews receive only a generic preview, never secret metadata.
The recipient opens the link directly and enters the required passphrase or OTP when configured. The secret is removed by TTL, views, or burn.
Paid users can create reverse links where a client or vendor uploads a secret to your console without exposing it in email.
Paid users can keep labeled passphrases in a secure vault, see only labels by default, and reuse the right phrase for recurring contacts.
Team adds API keys, admins, branded request portals, webhooks, and audit metadata without storing secret plaintext in operational views.
The local MCP adapter exposes secret tools to compatible agents while keeping encryption on the client side. Agents can create encrypted pushes, request links, burns, and vault-assisted handoffs without sending plaintext to Shhhs.
Agentic secret sharing lets one agent produce a temporary encrypted handoff for another agent or workflow. The receiving side gets a controlled link or request flow instead of secrets pasted into prompts, logs, or transcripts.
Anonymous text-only sharing for occasional secrets.
USD 010 secrets / 3 months for paid, occasional work.
USD 29A short project window for clients, vendors, and urgent handoffs.
USD 49Better value for regular secure sharing.
USD 12/moOperational controls for teams and API-driven workflows.
USD 49/moPrivate deployment, IAM lifecycle hooks, and Microsoft or Google Workspace integration planning.
Contact usNo. Known messaging and social preview bots receive a generic page and no public metadata.
Yes. Paid packages include request links where someone else uploads a secret that only the owner can reveal.
Vault values are shown blurred by default and are intended for paid accounts with stronger account security.
Yes. Team/API usage includes a local MCP adapter so agents can exchange encrypted secrets without storing plaintext in Shhhs or agent prompts.