04/07/2026
VaultNet is a cloud storage platform built around one principle: the server should never have access to your files in readable form. Everything is encrypted on your device before it leaves, using strong cryptography, so even VaultNet cannot read what you've stored.
Where it goes further than most platforms is quantum security. Standard encryption — the kind banks and most cloud providers use — is vulnerable to quantum computers. A sufficiently powerful quantum machine can break the math that protects your data in a matter of hours rather than centuries. This isn't a future problem that can be patched later; files stored today could be captured and decrypted once that computing power exists.
VaultNet uses the encryption standards just ratified by NIST specifically to address this. Your files are protected with a hybrid approach: conventional encryption layered with post-quantum algorithms — ML-KEM-768 for key exchange and Dilithium for digital signatures — so the data is resistant to both classical and quantum attacks simultaneously. The keys never leave your device. VaultNet holds encrypted ciphertext, nothing else.
File sharing works the same way. When you share a file, the recipient receives an encrypted package. You control whether that share expires after a set time, after a single view, or self-destructs on a schedule you define. Collaborative workspaces use independent client-side keys, meaning each shared environment is cryptographically isolated.
On government subpoenas — this is where the architecture matters practically. If VaultNet receives a legal demand to hand over your files, the only thing it can produce is the encrypted data sitting on its servers. It does not hold your decryption keys. Those exist only on your device. What a subpoena gets is ciphertext — mathematically useless without the key. VaultNet cannot be compelled to provide what it does not have access to. This is the same reason a locksmith cannot open a safe they've never seen the combination for.
Built into the platform is also an AI assistant, a blockchain proof-of-storage record for each file, and a token economy that rewards consistent use — including a virtual guardian creature tied to your vault activity.
It sits in the space between enterprise security infrastructure and consumer software — private by design, quantum-resistant by architecture, and structured so that legal pressure on the platform itself cannot reach your data. So it can pretty do everything and the only person who can see or use it is the user