Write a private note that disappears
Create a burn-after-reading note for sensitive messages that should not live forever in chat or email.
Private Note
Write the note. Secret Pusher encrypts it locally and creates a temporary reveal link.
A burn-after-reading note is a private message that becomes unavailable after it is opened or after its expiration time passes.
What to avoid
- Putting private notes into permanent chat threads.
- Sending sensitive onboarding details in an email chain.
- Using shared documents for short-lived confidential messages.
Safer workflow
- 1 Write the private note in the encrypted form.
- 2 Use one view for sensitive or personal details.
- 3 Set an expiration that matches how long the recipient needs access.
- 4 Confirm the recipient has opened it before deleting related copies.
Unsafe channel vs safer delivery
Trust Notes
- Private note encryption in the browser
- Burn after one view by default
- Time-based expiration
- Optional extra password layer
Common Use Cases
FAQ
What does burn after reading mean?
The note is no longer available after the allowed view count is consumed or the expiration time passes.
Can I allow more than one view?
Yes, although one view is the safest default for private notes.
Should I paste private notes into chat?
Chat tools often keep searchable histories. A temporary encrypted link is safer for sensitive notes.
Related Tools
View all toolsCreate a one-time secret link
Paste sensitive text, set when it expires, and share a link that burns after it is opened.
Send a password securely
Create a self-destructing encrypted link instead of putting the password directly into email or chat.
Create a secure note for a support ticket
Paste a secure expiring link into the ticket instead of exposing credentials in the ticket history.
Send login details securely
Share structured credentials without putting the username and password directly into email, chat, or support tickets.