Latest news

  • 05/01/2026

    A Message from the INF-S Team

    Dear friends, valued users, and like-minded individuals,

    Since 2015, our INF-S team has been dedicated to creating and maintaining the most reliable tools for anonymous and secure communication online. We provide free services, including email, phone, VPN channels, and file and message exchange platforms. Throughout the years, the understanding of how important it is to ensure free and safe communication for our users has given meaning to our work and inspired us to keep improving our services.

    However, the rapidly changing external circumstances have made it extremely difficult to continue our mission without community support. That is why we are reaching out to ask for your help. We know how much you value your privacy, and your support will help us continue offering high-quality and secure services for everyone.

    We believe that your contribution is a step toward building a safer and freer Internet for all. Together, we can keep fighting against security threats and preserve the freedom of communication for everyone.

    How can you help?

    Every donation, no matter how small, allows us to improve and expand our services, and to continue protecting the anonymity and security of users worldwide.

    Support us — and together we can make the Internet a safer and freer place for everyone!

    Make a Donation

    With gratitude and respect,

    Your INF-S team — the guarantor of security and anonymity.

    P.S. If you would like to offer any assistance, please feel free to reach out to us, and we will find a way to make it happen.

  • 04/11/2026

    More than 200 vulnerabilities were discovered in Max that open the way to other people's correspondence and files

    The Max platform paid 22 million rubles for reporting vulnerabilities. A new controversy has erupted around Max about the security of personal correspondence. Kommersant, with reference to participants in the bug bounty program, writes that white hat hackers have already sent more than 200 reports of vulnerabilities, and the most common vector is called IDOR - a class of errors in which access to other people's data is gained through the substitution of identifiers in requests to the server.

    Details

  • 04/08/2026

    An Android application has appeared on GitHub that detects VPNs in the same way as RKN does

    RKNHardering collects network signatures inside Android and shows that checking bypass tools has long gone beyond a single IP address.

    Details