Secure Credential Sharing
Freelancers, agencies, and IT teams use CYPH3RDROP to share passwords and credentials without leaving a trail. One-time encrypted link — opens once, then it's gone. No accounts. No plaintext. No risk.
Encrypted·Delivered·Destroyed
How It Works
Create a secret link
Encrypted in your browser · Burns after one view
Your secret link is ready
This link works once. Share it only with the intended recipient.
Decrypting…
Your secret
This was your one view. The secret has been permanently deleted.
This secret has been permanently destroyed from our servers.
🔥
This secret has been destroyed
Already opened, expired, or the link is invalid. Secrets can only be read once.
Type or paste your password, API key, or any sensitive text. Your browser encrypts it before anything leaves your device.
The recipient opens the link in their browser. The secret is decrypted on their device — our server never sees the plaintext.
The moment the link is opened, the encrypted data is permanently deleted. Try the same link again and it's already gone.
Why CYPH3RDROP
Your secret is encrypted using AES-256-GCM in your browser before it leaves your device. CYPH3RDROP never sees the plaintext.
Each link works exactly once. The moment it's opened, the secret is permanently deleted. No copies, no history.
Paste a secret, get a link. Share it. Done. Your recipient doesn't need to sign up for anything.
If a link is never opened, it expires and is deleted automatically after 7 days. Nothing lingers on our servers.
Frequently asked questions
No. Encryption happens in your browser before anything is sent to our servers. We only store the encrypted ciphertext — the decryption key never leaves your device.
The secret is immediately and permanently deleted from our servers the moment it is retrieved. There is no way to recover it after that point.
All secrets automatically expire and are deleted after 7 days, whether or not they have been viewed.
Yes. CYPH3RDROP uses AES-256-GCM encryption — the same standard used by banks and security professionals. It is significantly more secure than sending credentials over email or chat.