About Anon Vision
Anon Vision was founded to close the gap between complex cybersecurity concepts and the everyday internet user. The privacy industry had become increasingly sensationalized — selling fear and utopian solutions rather than actionable, factual knowledge.
Our mission: provide a hype-free, technically rigorous but accessible resource for understanding digital freedom, encryption, decentralization, and metadata protection. Privacy is not a luxury or a political statement — it is a fundamental component of personal and economic autonomy.
Our Core Principles
- No utopian promises: There is no software that makes you invisible. Privacy requires effort, habit changes, and honest trade-offs. Anyone claiming otherwise is selling something.
- No sponsored rankings: We do not accept sponsorships from VPN providers, cybersecurity vendors, or any company whose products we discuss. Analysis is based on cryptographic merit and independent audits.
- Metadata first: While the industry focuses on content encryption (which is largely solved), we focus on the data trail surrounding content — metadata — which is systematically underestimated.
- Threat-model driven: Not everyone needs Tails OS and a Faraday cage. We match recommendations to realistic threat models, because unsustainable setups get abandoned.
- Open-source preference: We strongly prefer tools that can be independently audited. Trust should be earned through code, not marketing claims.
Editorial Policy
All factual claims are sourced to original primary sources — academic papers, official documentation, government reports, or directly verifiable public statements. We cite our sources on every content page. When evidence is uncertain or contested, we say so explicitly rather than presenting a false confidence.
We are independent writers and researchers with backgrounds in information security, cryptography, and civil liberties. We are not lawyers and do not provide legal advice. We are not security consultants and do not offer personalized security assessments. If you are in an immediately dangerous situation, contact Access Now's Digital Security Helpline or Freedom of the Press Foundation.