Creative Ventures team5 min read

Blured is generally available: privacy-first social, rewritten

After 18 months of closed beta, 12,000 users and a full rewrite of the privacy model, Blured launches to the public — end-to-end encrypted, capability-based access control, no ads.

Blured — privacy-first social app general availability launch

Blured started as a private-by-default social graph — an answer to the extractive defaults of the mainstream networks. It graduates out of closed beta today. The app has not changed its mind about the product it wants to be. It has changed its mind about how to get there.

What changed between beta and GA

Three rewrites. The privacy model moved from app-level ACLs to a formally-verified capability system — the kind of thing where an engineer can prove, not argue, who can see what. Sync became end-to-end encrypted by default. And the moderation pipeline is now a hybrid of on-device classifiers and a small community-run review panel.

Blured capability-based access control diagram
New access model — every post is scoped by a capability, not by an ACL lookup.

What the beta taught us about privacy defaults

Users did not want another "be careful what you post" lecture. They wanted a default where the boring thing was the safe thing. Most of our wins came from making private the cheapest action and public the deliberate one — the opposite of how mainstream networks are tuned.

Default matters more than setting. If a user has to think about privacy, the product has already lost.
Blured founding team

Pricing and roadmap

Free for personal use, $4/mo for the pro tier with team spaces, custom domains and bring-your-own-storage. No ads, no SDK, no data export to third parties. Ever.