A messenger that is actually yours: your name, your keys, your money
The problem with the messengers you use
To message someone, you hand over your phone number. To sign up, an email. The app reads your metadata, and the account is never really yours — it lives on a company's server that can lock it, mine it, or lose it.
What we think you actually want
You want to talk privately, and you want it to be yours. So Heylogram Messenger starts there, not from a feature list:
- **You should not give your phone number just to talk.** Your account is a name you own — your `.heylogramtv` identity. No number, no email. - **No one should be able to read your messages.** They are end-to-end encrypted (X25519 + XChaCha20-Poly1305); the server only carries a sealed envelope and keeps no chat history. - **Money should not need a second app.** Pay a person by their name, right inside the chat — no long 0x address. - **It should simply work** — voice and video calls, contacts, location, and themes. Start free and anonymous; claim a name when you want payments and your full identity.
In one line
A messenger that is finally yours: your name, your keys, your money — and no phone number in anyone's database.
Try it: **messenger.heylogram.com**
*— Heylogram*