Create a one-time secret link
Paste sensitive text, set when it expires, and share a link that burns after it is opened.
Secret Link Generator
Use this for passwords, tokens, credentials, private URLs, and sensitive notes.
A one-time secret link is best for sensitive text that should be available briefly and then disappear after the allowed view count or expiration is reached.
What to avoid
- Keeping tokens and private notes in searchable chat history.
- Sharing long-lived links to sensitive text.
- Using a public paste service for private operational data.
Safer workflow
- 1 Paste the sensitive text into the generator.
- 2 Choose one view unless multiple people truly need access.
- 3 Use a short expiration for temporary credentials or tokens.
- 4 Send the generated link to the intended recipient only.
Unsafe channel vs safer delivery
Trust Notes
- Encrypted before upload
- View limit enforced on reveal
- Short-lived links by default
- No account required for this public text tool
Common Use Cases
FAQ
What is a one-time secret link?
It is a temporary link that reveals sensitive content only within the expiration and view limits you choose.
What can I send with this tool?
Use it for passwords, API keys, tokens, credentials, private notes, and other sensitive text.
Does the link last forever?
No. You choose the expiration window and maximum number of views before creating the link.
Related Tools
View all toolsSend a password securely
Create a self-destructing encrypted link instead of putting the password directly into email or chat.
Write a private note that disappears
Create a burn-after-reading note for sensitive messages that should not live forever in chat or email.
Send an API key securely
Do not paste API keys into Slack, email, or tickets. Create a short-lived encrypted link instead.
Create a secure note for a support ticket
Paste a secure expiring link into the ticket instead of exposing credentials in the ticket history.