STATUS · NOT YET LIVE

The wall is
coming down.

We will be here very soon — a VPN built quietly, for the moment the connection matters most. Full speed. No borders. No log.

We'll only email you once — when we launch.

§1 Why it matters

Information doesn't belong to borders.

In too many places, a news site, a message, a search result depends on permission it should never have needed. MitiVPN exists to remove that permission requirement — routing your connection past filters, throttling, and surveillance, so the internet you reach is the same one everyone else does.

Access to information is a right, not a privilege granted by geography. A government, an ISP, or a firewall shouldn't decide what a person is allowed to read, say, or watch. That belief is the whole reason MitiVPN is being built: a network with no borders, where a connection is judged on nothing but whether you asked for it. Free, unfiltered, and yours.

No-log by design

Nothing about your session is written down. Not your traffic, not your timestamps, not your IP.

Built for blocked regions

Designed against deep packet inspection and aggressive state-level filtering, not just casual geo-blocks.

Fast enough to forget it's on

Encryption that doesn't cost you the connection — video calls and streams stay usable.

Borderless by default

One network, reachable from anywhere — access isn't a feature you unlock by country.

§2 Questions

A few things people ask early.

When does MitiVPN launch?

Soon. We're finishing the network before we open it, not the other way around. Join the list above and you'll be the first to know.

Will there be a free tier?

Yes. Open access matters most where paying for it is hardest — a free tier will exist from day one.

What platforms will be supported?

Windows, macOS, Linux, Android, and iOS are all planned for the initial release.

Do you keep connection logs?

No. A strict no-log policy is a starting requirement of the architecture, not a promise added later.

How can I help or get involved?

Reach out by email — early testers, translators, and feedback are all welcome before launch.