Private Note Tool

Share a private note without dropping plain text into your inbox.

NoteShared packages the note in the browser, turns it into an encrypted link, and gives you the option to add a separate passphrase when the message deserves more care.

  • No account wall for basic note sharing
  • Optional passphrase for a second layer beyond the link
  • Guides that explain when this approach helps and where it does not

Best for passwords, temporary instructions, vendor handoffs, and admin notes.

Built for people who want something safer than plain email but simpler than a full secure workspace.

Create A Note Link

Package the note in your browser.

Static Utility

Workspace status

Browser-side encryption ready AES-GCM flow

Ready to package a new private note.

Note size

Character count

0 characters Ready

Keep very long or high-risk material in dedicated secure systems instead of a simple shared note.

If you add a passphrase, share it separately from the link. That keeps the link itself from being the only thing someone needs.

Share package

Link-only access

Open shared note

Open the shared note here if a note package is present in the URL.

What This Site Does Well

A simpler sharing layer for private text that should not live in plain view.

NoteShared is for the common middle ground: information that is not life-or-death secret material, but still deserves more care than a normal email thread, helpdesk ticket, or chat paste.

Private links

Create a link that packages the encrypted note in the URL fragment so it can be opened in the browser by the recipient.

Optional passphrase

Add a second layer when you want the link and the unlock phrase delivered through separate channels.

Plain-language guidance

Use the guides and FAQ to decide when this kind of sharing is enough and when you need a stronger workflow.

Workflow

One tool, three steps, fewer careless shares.

1

Write the note

Paste the text that should not sit around in plain email or team chat.

2

Decide whether to add a passphrase

Leave it blank for convenience or add one when you want the recipient to need something beyond the link.

3

Share more carefully

Send the link, and if you used a passphrase, send that through a second route such as phone, chat, or a separate email.

Use Cases

Good fits for the tool.

These are the kinds of situations where a private link is often better than dropping the text into a normal thread.

Operations handoff

Share temporary credentials, setup codes, or account notes with one teammate without leaving them in a long message history.

Vendor or client instructions

Send short private context, callback numbers, or one-off routing details that do not belong in a public project channel.

Admin cleanup

Move away from sticky-note habits and plain-text forwarding when the information is temporary but still sensitive.

Keep The Claims Honest

This is useful, but it is not magic.

A static note-sharing tool can improve everyday privacy habits, but it is not a substitute for a security-reviewed enterprise vault or a server-enforced burn-after-read system.

Use for moderate sensitivity

Good for practical private text. Not the right place for regulated records, full account dumps, or emergency material.

Prefer separate channels

If you add a passphrase, do not send it in the same message as the link unless convenience matters more than the extra layer.

Read the security notes

The security page explains what this browser-side approach does and what it intentionally does not promise.

More Reading

Support pages that answer the obvious questions.

That includes how the flow works, when to use a passphrase, and when a secure note is better than email.

How does the note link work?

The note is packaged in the browser and the encrypted payload is placed into the URL fragment for sharing.

Read how it works

What should the security expectation be?

This build improves privacy habits, but it does not claim server-enforced one-time destruction.

Read the security page

When is a passphrase worth it?

Add one when the note should not be readable by whoever happens to see the link alone.

Read the guide

When is this better than email?

When the message is brief, temporary, and private enough that you would rather not leave it in a standard conversation thread.

Read the comparison