Send material to the nonlocality editorial line at archives.virebent.art — anonymously, with no account, no email, no Tor.
The channel is nymdrop, our own submission system. I don’t forward to third parties and I make no promise I can’t keep: you submit, I review it for publication, I never learn who you are.
Status — not yet in production. Launching soon. What follows is the design; the public submission endpoint is not live yet.
A web application. Your file is encrypted in your browser (X25519 + AES-GCM) and carried to me over the Nym mixnet — multi-hop, padded, time-mixed, no Tor. The server only ever sees ciphertext.
It resists network surveillance (mixnet routing), server seizure (the server holds only ciphertext), and metadata correlation (no logs of IP, User-Agent or timestamp; no identifiers at all).
It cannot protect a compromised device on your side, your physical surroundings, or stylometric correlation if you are one of a few suspects. Submit from Tails or a clean install, and read the EFF Surveillance Self-Defense guide before you act.
Material is reviewed offline, with the hardware key present. If it fits the nonlocality line it is published on archives.virebent.art. Nothing about your identity is retained.
If you would rather keep your keys on a machine that never touches a network, see AEC — Air Gapped Encrypted Communications by Ch1ffr3punk: github.com/Ch1ffr3punk/AEC. It encrypts messages (NaCl box) on an offline computer and moves them as QR codes over a webcam, so nothing sensitive ever crosses a network link. With its companion tool E2Q it can post esub-formatted messages to Usenet’s alt.anonymous.messages — a long-standing broadcast channel for anonymous publishing.