Privacy + Ravn

As a local rights group prepares to challenge it in court, we all must swallow the fact that on May 23rd 2018, The Bahamas passed the Interception of Communications Bill (ICB), which authorizes “the interception of communications of public and private systems within a single legal framework.”

It’s being referred to by some as the “spy bill’. It is controversial and seen by some as an attack on civil liberties because it is in place to allow for the interception of all communication networks, including telecommunication networks and internet providers.

Ravn’s culture falls in line with those who believe in human rights and oppose this type of legislation that disregards privacy. The good news is, this new and invasive bill won’t affect those using Ravn due to so many aspects of the app that provide privacy and protection unlike any message apps that have preceded it.

Since Ravn is literally hidden, it goes undetected on your mobile device. Your personal information such as phone number, name and email are not required, so users remain 100% anonymous and no data can be connected to you. On that note, no data is collected. The transmission of Ravn communications are AES 256 encrypted, using OMEMO protocol and data is stored only on your own device. Ravn operates using the Stellar platform and blockchain is airtight vs the internet.

Ravn eliminates worry and all of hides your messages whether they’re easy quick chats or highly confidential business deals. With some governments leaning away from their historically democratic decisions and with the more recent magnitudes of data breaches and hackers that are always looking for their next challenge, Ravn is a safe place on your own device for those who still value their human right to privacy.