Apni details chupke se share karo.
Your age. Your number. Your email. Every day, you're asked to say them out loud — to a stranger, in a room full of people. That's not okay.
No spam. Just one email when we launch.
"Your personal details are not a public announcement.
Privacy is not a privilege. It's a basic human right.
And it starts at the counter."
— The idea behind Chupke
The scale of the problem
Sound familiar?
We've been conditioned to just say it — number, email, date of birth — out loud, on demand, without thinking twice. But these are deeply personal details. You shouldn't have to broadcast them to a room full of strangers.
"Date of birth?"
You're at the clinic. The waiting room is full. The person at the counter asks your date of birth out loud. You say it. The person next to you now knows how old you are. Age is private. It shouldn't be announced.
"Your email ID?"
Gym membership signup. You spell out your email — letter by letter — at the front desk. People in the queue hear your full name, your email provider, sometimes even a number that hints at your birth year.
"Mobile number for the bill?"
Supermarket checkout. Five people behind you in a queue. You say your number out loud. It takes three seconds. But that's all it takes for someone to note it down.
"Number on the booking?"
Cinema ticket counter. Crowded lobby. You say your number to collect your tickets. The family standing next to you heard every digit.
"Register for loyalty points?"
Mall store. The salesperson asks for your number and email. You give them. Loudly. To earn 50 points. The awkwardness never feels worth it.
It's not just about you
You've learned to brush it off. But what about your teenage daughter, or your elderly parents? They face the same moments — without the same awareness of what can go wrong.
She says her number out loud at the cinema counter. A stranger behind her notes it down.
That night, an unknown number texts her on WhatsApp. She doesn't know who it is or how they got her number. She feels unsafe. You feel helpless. It all started with ten digits said out loud in a public place.
They give out their number and date of birth without a second thought. They trust everyone.
Your parents grew up in a time when sharing your number was harmless. They don't think twice at a supermarket counter or a clinic. They don't realise someone nearby just noted their number, their age, and now knows they live alone.
Every day, millions of women across India say their phone number out loud — at billing counters, cinema booths, clinic desks, gym front desks. Most of the time, nothing happens. But sometimes, it does.
Unwanted messages and calls
A number said out loud at a counter can land in the wrong hands in seconds. Once someone has it, you have no control.
Your number reveals more than you think
A phone number can be used to find your name, your WhatsApp display picture, sometimes even your location. All from ten digits spoken at a counter.
You shouldn't have to think twice
You shouldn't have to hesitate before giving your number. You shouldn't have to look around before speaking. Chupke means you never have to again.
Imagine walking up to any counter.
Holding up your phone for 3 seconds.
Walking away.
No words. No awkwardness. Nothing left behind.
That's what Chupke feels like.
How Chupke works
The person at the counter doesn't need to install anything. Just their phone camera.
Set up once
Add your mobile, email, and date of birth. Verified with OTP — so it's actually yours, not made up.
Show a QR, say nothing
Open Chupke, choose what to share, hold up your phone. The person at the counter scans it. Zero words exchanged.
Gone in 20 seconds
Their screen shows your details with a countdown. When it hits zero — it all disappears. Nothing saved on their device. Ever.
Questions
No. Nothing to install, nothing to sign up for on their end. All they need is the camera on their phone — the same one they use every day.
No. Once the moment passes, it's gone. Nothing is saved on anyone else's device. Your details exist only for the seconds they're needed — and then they disappear completely.
We've thought about this. The display is designed to make opportunistic capture as difficult as possible. But beyond the technology — if someone is that determined, they'd note it down from verbal sharing too. Chupke is built to eliminate casual, accidental exposure — which is where 99% of the risk lives.
Yes, completely free for users. Always. Your privacy shouldn't cost you anything.
The difference
Said out loud, every time
Shared silently, on your terms
The first 1,000 people on the waitlist get early access and a direct say in shaping how Chupke works.
Chupke is launching soon. Be the first to know.