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xPrivo

Open Source, Free Anonymous AI Chat - Ready to Run Locally

Open Source
Privacy
Artificial Intelligence
GitHub

xPrivo is a free, open-source, private AI chat assistant that focuses entirely on keeping you anonymous. You never need to create an account, even with the PRO membership. You can either self-host it or use it directly via the website. xPrivo uses modern, powerful open-source models such as Mistral 3 and DeepSeek V3.2, which are self-hosted in the EU. Chats are never logged or used for training, and they stay completely local to your device. Your chat history is never stored elsewhere.

Top comment

By default, the most powerful AI assistants train their new models using your conversations. They can also read your personal chats with the AI assistants. With xPrivo, however, you have the power to keep your chats completely private and ensure they remain on your device. As it is open source, you can even run it on your own device and have an AI assistant that runs entirely locally, provided your hardware is powerful enough. If your hardware isn't powerful enough, simply use the website and stay anonymous. To fund the project, you may occasionally see non-personalised, non-intrusive ads which is completely fair or upgrade to PRO (see voucher above)

Comment highlights

The idea is very interesting, and the problem is relevant. But there are rumors that DeepSeek trains on user data without permission ;)

Congrats on the launch! It’s refreshing to see an AI tool that puts user privacy first instead of treating conversations as training data. Are you planning to support more local models over time?

Good balance between control and simplicity. Exporting settings or sharing configurations across devices could be a great next step

If I use locally then I understand the chats are secure, how this is true when using via website? Congrats on launch!

Great idea. But did you also do some fine-tuning of your models to make them good for a particular use case?

Amazing! And you aren't required to keep those chat for compliance reasons? Also how does that model (xprivo) compares to other contemporary models?

Thanks for sharing this Open-Source gem Jim @jim_engine