Protect Customer Data
- End-to-end encryption for all customer interactions
- Securely share support tickets and sensitive information
- Maintain compliance with data protection regulations
Protect customer data and sensitive communications with CRYMBL.
Tailored solutions for the daily support routine – so your team can focus on what matters.
Everything you need to send and receive confidential data.
Whether login data, passwords, PINs or sensitive documents – with CRYMBL you can send messages and files so that they can only be read or downloaded once and are then automatically deleted.
Unlike email or traditional cloud tools, CRYMBL never stores in plain text. Everything is encrypted directly in your browser before it leaves your device – and only the recipient has the key.
Teams and individuals trust CRYMBL with their sensitive data. Hear from some of them.
“When it came to deciding on a platform to use for generating all of our QR Codes, there was a general consensus among the team—of course we should use CRYMBL! We didn't even give it a second thought.”
Melody Park
Marketing Lead • Smalls
“When customers receive a status update from us, they can click on our encrypted link and directly view their order without having to log in, which is a smoother user experience and still keeps their information secure.”
Phil Gergen
Chief Information Officer • Koozie Group
“CRYMBL has been a game-changer for our IT department. The ease of use and robust security features have allowed us to streamline our processes while ensuring our data remains protected.”
Sammy Wilson
Head of IT • TechNova
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Everything in Standard, plus:
Everything in Professional, plus:
Everything about secure communication, data protection, and zero-knowledge encryption from the CRYMBL team.
Artificial intelligence runs on data; data protection law constrains it. From this tension arise concrete legal challenges – set out along the GDPR and the AI Act.
Zero-knowledge describes what a provider does not know about your data. The term promises a great deal – and is often confused with an entirely different concept.
A plaintext password in a mailbox is an avoidable liability. Which methods – from out-of-band delivery to zero-knowledge one-time links – actually protect a credential in transit and at rest.