Semantic Message Encoding Protocol (SMEP)

🔐 SMEP

True Anonymous Encryption – No Account, No App, No Servers

Encrypt Message

0/16 characters

Decrypt Message

0/16 characters

Why True Anonymous Encryption Matters

In a world where every app wants your data, SMEP asks for nothing. No phone number. No email. No account. No tracking. Just pure, anonymous encryption.

What Makes SMEP Truly Anonymous?

Service Phone Number Email/Account App Install Server Storage
Signal ✗ Required ✓ None ✗ Required ✓ Encrypted
WhatsApp ✗ Required ✗ Facebook ✗ Required ✗ Meta Servers
Telegram ✗ Required ✓ None ✗ Required ✗ Telegram Servers
ProtonMail ✓ None ✗ Required ✓ Browser ✗ Proton Servers
SMEP ✓ None ✓ None ✓ Browser Only ✓ No Servers

The Privacy Problem with “Secure” Apps

Even the best encrypted messaging apps have a fatal flaw: they know who you are.

  • Phone numbers are identity. Signal requires your phone number. Even if messages are encrypted, Signal knows you’re talking to someone. Metadata matters.
  • Servers get hacked. ProtonMail is encrypted, but their servers still store your account data. Servers can be breached, subpoenaed, or compromised.
  • Apps track you. Mobile apps have permissions to access contacts, location, and device data. Even if they promise not to, you’re trusting them.
  • Accounts create profiles. Every account you create is another data point. Another target. Another vulnerability.

How SMEP is Different

👤 Zero Identity

No phone number, no email, no name, no account. We literally don’t know who you are. We can’t – there’s nothing to collect.

💻 Browser-Only Processing

All encryption happens in YOUR browser. Your message never touches our servers because we don’t have servers. Can’t hack what doesn’t exist.

🌐 Platform Agnostic

Encrypt once, share anywhere. Copy the encrypted string and paste it in SMS, email, Discord, Reddit, carrier pigeon – wherever you want.

🔒 Military-Grade Security

AES-256-GCM encryption – the same standard used by banks, governments, and militaries worldwide. 2^256 possible keys = unbreakable.

🆓 Free Forever

No premium tiers. No feature gates. No “upgrade to decrypt.” Truly free, because we’re not building a business on your data.

🔓 Open & Transparent

View the code right in your browser (right-click → View Source). See exactly what’s happening. No hidden tracking.

Real Use Cases

When would you use SMEP?

  • Whistleblowing: Share sensitive information without creating an account trail
  • Journalism: Protect sources by avoiding identity-linked messaging apps
  • Healthcare: Share medical info without violating HIPAA by creating accounts
  • Legal: Attorney-client communications without metadata leakage
  • Business: Share confidential data across teams using different platforms
  • Personal: Private conversations without Big Tech knowing who you talk to

How It Works

  1. You create a secret key (16+ characters, share it with your recipient once via secure channel)
  2. Enter your message and click Encrypt
  3. Copy the encrypted string and share it anywhere (email, SMS, chat, etc.)
  4. Recipient uses the same key to decrypt
  5. Multiple messages? Keep using the same key – each message gets its own unique encrypted string

Technical Details

  • Algorithm: AES-256-GCM (Galois/Counter Mode)
  • Key Derivation: PBKDF2 with 100,000 iterations
  • Authentication: Built-in GCM authentication tag (tamper-proof)
  • Randomization: Unique salt and IV for each message
  • Browser API: Web Crypto API (native browser implementation)

⚠️ Important

Secret keys are never stored. Write them down in a safe place. Lost keys = lost messages forever. This is the price of true anonymity.

The Bottom Line

Privacy isn’t about having something to hide. It’s about having something to protect.

In an age where every app wants your phone number, every service wants your email, and every platform wants to build a profile on you – SMEP offers something radical: encryption that asks for nothing but a key.

Version: SMEP 2.0
Created: December 2025
Author: Kevin L. Brown
Website: CreationUnified.com
Based on: Unified Informational Physics Ontology