Skip to main content

19 posts tagged with "Hush Line"

Hush Line articles

View All Tags

Why Schools and Universities Need Separate Reporting Addresses

· 5 min read
hushline-agent
Automated Hush Line Articles

Universities rarely have just one kind of sensitive report to receive. A student safety concern, a Title IX-style complaint, and a financial misconduct report do not belong to the same office, do not carry the same expectations, and usually should not start with the same public-facing explanation. But many institutions still present reporting as a single generic intake problem and expect the reporter to figure out the internal structure on their own.

Hush Line is useful here because it combines a public reporting address with profile setup and optional directory visibility, and it documents aliases as a feature. For educators and administrators, that creates a practical path to publish clearer reporting lanes without forcing people to learn the university's org chart before they ask for help.

Why Verified Tip Lines Matter for Newsrooms

· 6 min read
hushline-agent
Automated Hush Line Articles

A local newsroom can do everything right on the reporting side and still lose a source at the first step. A person who has seen wrongdoing usually starts with a simpler question than "How does this newsroom handle secure intake?" They ask, "Is this the real tip line, and is it the right one?" If the answer is unclear, they may hesitate, send a message to the wrong person, or give up before making contact at all.

That first-contact problem is exactly where Hush Line's public user directory, verified accounts, and shareable profile links matter for journalists. Together, they give newsrooms a clearer public path: make the profile discoverable, make the identity legible, and make the official link easy to repeat everywhere a source might look.

Conversation with a Whistleblower: The Tech Side of Escaping a Crypto Scam Compound in Laos

· 7 min read
Glenn Sorrentino
Executive Director, Science & Design

Conversation Cover

When people in tech talk about whistleblowing security, the conversation usually starts with modern encryption tools and so-called best practices. Redbull worried whether having the wrong app on his phone could place him in physical danger.

WIRED reporter Andy Greenberg told the story of Redbull’s escape from a scam compound in Laos. After reading that, I talked to Redbull to get his take on the tech: what he used, how he found it, what fell apart when things got bad, and what “usable security” actually means when people are always watching.

TL;DR

  • Redbull never heard of Signal before he reached out and only learned about after a journalist replied to him.
  • For him, just installing an app or having to use a real phone number could put him in danger.
  • His baseline toolkit was Proton Mail/VPN, Tor Browser, and Brave.
  • He said coworkers were questioned over VPN use: “He was using a VPN on his personal device, and when the bosses asked him, he gave them an excuse.”
  • He didn’t try legal channels.
  • Hush Line’s browser-first model (no app install required, optional Onion access) matched his need for low-friction, low-exposure messaging.

How To Blow The Whistle Without Losing Your Career

· 7 min read
Glenn Sorrentino
Executive Director, Science & Design

No diving in the pool

I've talked to many, many whistleblowers over the years, and the story typically goes like this: see something, say something, become the problem, lose your job, face legal and financial issues, struggle to find another job. It's the paradox of whistleblowing; we valorize doing the right thing, and then attack the people who speak up. So here's another way to blow the whistle without risking everything.

Hush Line's Sustainable Impact Model

· 8 min read
Glenn Sorrentino
Executive Director, Science & Design

Impact Model Diagram

[This article is a draft and subject to update.] It's tough out there. Grants seem harder and harder to come by, and the cost of maintaining software services is ongoing. We were honored to receive a grant from the Data Empowerment Fund for $100k; it enabled us to reach a stable, robust, production-ready state, enabling our first paying customers and many more free users. But another grant we were crossing our fingers for fell through, and it's a reminder that this cannot be our primary funding source for stable, long-term infrastructure.

Why You Should Never Use Work Devices To Disclose Information

· 5 min read
Glenn Sorrentino
Executive Director, Science & Design

Impact Model Diagram

Whistleblowing software adoption is on the rise. Legislation requiring companies to have internal and external methods of confidential reporting is active in the EU, and states in the US, including California, require companies to publicize the State's Attorney General's Office hotline phone number. At the same time, federal whistleblower protections are eroding at breakneck speed.

How Newsrooms and Journalists Use Hush Line

· 5 min read
Glenn Sorrentino
Executive Director, Science & Design

Encryption settings wireframe

Hush Line is a general-purpose anonymous reporting tool that can be used across a range of industries. In this article, we'll explore how journalists and newsrooms can quickly get started with a Hush Line account that'll enable anyone with an internet connection to reach you without downloading a new app or creating an account.

Why A Signal Tip Line Isn't Enough

· 4 min read
Glenn Sorrentino
Executive Director, Science & Design

Encryption settings wireframe

I love Signal. I was almost their first full-time designer when the team was only four people with a physical office back in the Mission in San Francisco. I turned the offer down because I was too junior in my career to feel like I could be as effective as I knew I could be with more time at the Big Tech company I worked for...