What is Morse

What is Morse

Morse is a private messaging app designed for everyday conversations.

It lets you send messages and make calls without creating a profile, sharing a phone number, or tying your conversations to an online identity.

You install it, unlock it, and start talking on your own terms.

Messaging, without an identity attached

Messaging, without an identity attached

Most messaging apps begin by asking who you are.

They want a phone number. A profile photo. A name that follows you everywhere.

Morse takes a different approach.

There's no account tied to your real-world identity. No public profile. No contact list stored somewhere else.

You're identified only by a private Morse ID that you choose when to share.

No profile or accountNo phone number, no photo, no name
Device-based identityIdentified by your device, nothing else
You choose when to shareShare your Morse ID only when you want

How conversations begin

On Morse, conversations don't start automatically.

1

Share your Morse ID

Send your code directly to someone you trust

2

Or scan a QR code

Meet in person and scan to connect instantly

3

Start talking

That's it - no approval flow, no friend request

To start a conversation, you share your Morse ID or QR code with someone you trust.

That single action is the only way a conversation begins.

Built for real conversations

Built for real conversations

Morse supports one-to-one and group conversations, as well as secure voice calls.

1-to-1 messages

Private conversations between two people

Group conversations

Coordinate with people you trust

Secure voice calls

End-to-end encrypted calls

No feeds or stories

Nothing competing for your attention

It's designed for talking things through, coordinating with people you trust, and having conversations that don't need to live forever.

There are no feeds, stories, or public timelines. Nothing to scroll. Nothing competing for your attention.

What stays private

End-to-end encrypted, always

Only the people in the conversation can read them. Morse can't see them.

No message records

Nothing stored after delivery

Server can't read content

Zero-knowledge architecture

Keys stay on device

Encryption keys never leave your phone

And it doesn't keep a record of who you talk to or when.

Once a conversation ends, there's nothing else attached to it.

Funded by users, not attention

Morse is paid for by the people who use it.

No advertising revenue

No engagement tracking

No data monetization

Funded directly by users

Because Morse doesn't depend on attention or data, it can focus entirely on delivering private communication.

Where Morse fits

Morse is useful when you want to talk without turning the conversation into part of a profile.

It works alongside other messaging apps, not necessarily instead of them.

Some conversations need reach. Others need space.

Morse is built for the second kind.

Most apps

Engagement
Profiles
Data collection

Morse

Conversations
Privacy
Your terms

Nothing more than messaging

Morse doesn't try to predict what you'll say.

It doesn't try to learn from your conversations.

And it doesn't try to keep them longer than necessary.

It simply lets people talk and then steps aside.

Nothing more than messaging

Get Morse

Private by design. Funded by users.