Digital Sovereignty

Your knowledge should belong to you. Not to a platform, not to a service — to you.

Markdown files on your computer

All notes are stored locally as Markdown files. Plain text files that open in any editor.

The platform doesn't own your content. It only publishes what you allow it to. The originals stay with you.

What this gives you

Freedom from moderation. Got your account banned? Your knowledge hasn't gone anywhere. It's on your computer. Moving to another service is a matter of a day, not months.

Protection against service shutdowns. Services close. Notion might shut down. Medium might shut down. Your Markdown files will remain.

Full control. Want a different editor — go ahead. Want your own server — deploy one. Want to switch to a competitor — take your files and go.

Your own server

For those who need absolute control: you can run the platform on your own server. Complete independence from third-party infrastructure.

Your data never leaves your server. There's no moderation. You set the rules.

Giving control back to authors

Most platforms work the other way around: you create content, the platform owns it. Leaving is hard, sometimes impossible.

Here it's different. The content is yours from the start. The platform is a publishing tool, not a storage vault. You can leave at any moment and take all your knowledge with you.

We call this the Contentless CMS — a CMS that doesn't store content inside itself.