About 5 min read

Why We Built MeetingPoint.chat

We launched MeetingPoint to solve a specific problem in the modern digital landscape: the erosion of privacy in casual communication.

We launched MeetingPoint to solve a specific problem in the modern digital landscape: the erosion of privacy in casual communication. Unlike major social platforms that harvest metadata, our architecture is strictly peer-to-peer (P2P). This means your data streams directly between devices—serverless, encrypted, and ephemeral.

We do not store logs, we do not require emails, and we do not track your digital footprint. In an era where every click, every message, and every call is potentially monetized, MeetingPoint stands as a refuge for those who believe that private conversation is a fundamental right—not a premium feature.

The Problem We Saw

Every major communication platform today operates on the same business model: collect user data, build behavioral profiles, and sell targeted advertising. Even platforms that claim end-to-end encryption still collect metadata—who you talk to, when, how often, and from where. This metadata alone can paint a disturbingly detailed picture of your life.

We asked ourselves: What if a communication tool simply didn't want your data? What if the architecture made it physically impossible to collect, store, or sell your conversations?

The P2P Solution

MeetingPoint uses WebRTC (Web Real-Time Communication) to establish direct connections between browsers. Once the initial handshake is complete, your video, audio, and text data flows directly from your device to your peer's device. Our servers are never in the loop—we couldn't record your call even if we wanted to.

This isn't just a privacy policy; it's a architectural guarantee. There is no database of messages to breach, no call logs to subpoena, and no user profiles to sell.

No Accounts, No Friction

We also eliminated the biggest barrier to quick communication: account creation. There's no sign-up form, no email verification, no password to remember. You create a room, share the link, and start talking. When you close the tab, the connection is severed and nothing remains.

This "disposable communication" model is intentional. It mirrors how conversations work in the real world—you have a discussion, and when it's over, there's no permanent record sitting on someone else's server.

Built for Everyone

Whether you're a freelancer coordinating with a client, a family staying connected across continents, a gamer organizing a raid, or a journalist protecting a source—MeetingPoint provides the same guarantee: your conversation belongs to you, and only you.