I build privacy infrastructure, public-interest tools, and occasionally the kind of backend that reminds you computers were a mistake.
My main project is Proofline, experimental public-interest open-source privacy and evidence infrastructure for preserving encrypted records with careful access boundaries, honest documentation, and no emergency-service promises.
The strongest current Proofline component is open-proofline/server: a Go backend for authenticated APIs, encrypted incident/chunk ingest, metadata and encrypted blob storage, private admin surfaces, encrypted evidence bundles, deployment docs, and release workflow. The web client is still an experimental prototype, and the public website is the source of truth for project framing, governance posture, and public boundaries.
I also operate a public Redlib instance as a best-effort community service, with optional Tor onion access and public status monitoring. It is separate from Proofline’s safety/evidence work and does not store Proofline account, evidence, or safety-context data.
My politics are not decorative. Proofline is aligned with cooperative and libertarian socialist principles: public-good infrastructure, workplace democracy, transparent compensation, pay for labour rather than ownership extraction, surplus reinvestment, open source, self-hosting, and resistance to corporate capture.
I care about tools that give people more agency, not less: privacy, clear limits, boring security boundaries, and infrastructure that does not quietly turn into surveillance with nicer buttons.
Currently focused on Proofline, community privacy services, pharmaceutical science study and security.




