Humanity deserves a better medium for thinking and communication
Own your Identity
Control your credentials—secure, decentralized, and independent of central authorities.
Content is cryptographically signed, so anyone can verify authenticity.
Your identity is validated with your social graph and domain names, forming a robust web of trust.
Your Publication. No Barriers.
Get your content online quickly and easily—no coding, no gatekeepers, no hassle.
With just a computer, you can publish with no censorship.
Because sites are portable, you can quickly publish to your own domain or hyper.media, ready to share with friends and the world.
Distributed Collaboration
Engage with your community by inviting readers and collaborators to your site. Connect directly peer-to-peer, with no centralized control.
Once you publish, build deep knowledge by sparking open discussions.
Signed Versions
Each change is cryptographically signed by the author. Leveraging the power of IPFS and CRDTs, each immutable version may be accurately referenced.
By delivering permanence, attribution, and versioning to the web, you can preserve the history of your community's knowledge.
Community Preservation
Thanks to the local-first architecture, your knowledge is archived at your fingertips– always there to search and retrieve.
By forming references, you back up and preserve content for your community.
Powerful Links and Embeds
Build precise knowledge structures by linking to exact sections, paragraphs, or words. Or, embed external content into your site, preserving attribution.
All references are bi-directional, so you can gain other perspectives by watching links to your content.
Open Protocol and Software
Seed Hypermedia is designed in two parts. Seed is the Open Source software developed by our team, while Hypermedia is the open protocol that enhances the web to build trust and collaboration.
Because our desktop app and server are Open Source, developers can join our community to expand the product for their needs.
Anyone can participate in the hypermedia protocol and extend it beyond the current capabilities.