There is this carrier I stumbled upon called Cape, calls itself America’s privacy first carrier.

It claims to offer privacy and security and to only store necessary information.

We don’t collect your name, social security number, address, or other personal information. Any data we do receive (like call logs) is deleted after 60 days.

We secure your account against SIM swaps—attacks to steal your phone number and access your accounts—with modern cryptography protocols.

Our proprietary signaling protection blocks attempts by bad actors to intercept calls and SMS via outdated signaling protocols like SS7.

Voicemails can hold sensitive information like 2FA codes. Cape encrypts your voicemails so only you have access to them.

We don’t collect your name or billing address at checkout, and Cape never sees your credit card details.

Anonymous sign-up

They are also partnered with Proton

Here is a detailed list of what data they collect

They are currently offering a $1.50 trial for one month.

The CEO, John Doyle, was a communications specialist in the U.S. Army and worked for Palantir.

Thoughts?

  • rumba@lemmy.zip
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    9 hours ago

    Yeah I wouldn’t put my dick in that.

    There is perhaps an opportunity there. You can’t be sure that they won’t collect location information or information off your phone. But if you took precautions to make sure you were anonymous when you purchased the stuff, and the device you are using was divorced from you entirely, you just have to make sure you never ever turn it on at home. Getting a working phone number/sim without an SSN/address identification isn’t nothing.

    I don’t trust that stripe wouldn’t out you. So you’d need to protect your payment info.

    I don’t trust that they won’t locate you or log your communication or handle your communication or location in a way that could be tracked by a powerful third party.

    That said, 99 bucks a month is pretty expensive to get an unidentified sim from a company you can’t necessarily trust.