Collaborative documents
A CRDT-based editor so two organizers can co-edit a strategy document with conflicts resolved automatically. Edits made offline merge cleanly when connectivity returns.
OutcryOS is in early testing.
The Next Version of Outcry
The organizers who got the most from Outcry kept bumping into the same wall: breakthrough insight in conversation, then back to a dozen fragmented corporate tools to coordinate action. The thinking happened here. The doing happened somewhere else entirely. We asked: what if the thinking tool was also the doing tool?
The Problem
There's a pattern in how movements use technology. First, inspiration: the group chat, the social post, the encrypted Signal thread. Then coordination: the shared doc, the spreadsheet, the calendar. And then the painful realization that these tools were never designed to work together, were never designed for an activist purpose at all.
Organizers spend half their cognitive budget managing fragmented tools and leaking operational security through gaps that shouldn't exist. For people doing high-risk work, the gap between strategic intelligence and operational security isn't just inconvenient. It's dangerous.
The Answer
Each user gets a persistent encrypted Linux machine in the cloud. It doesn't disappear when you close your browser. Your files, your notes, your contacts, your communication history live on, encrypted at rest. It's not a chat app with a lock icon. Not a cloud drive with a privacy policy. An operating system.
Join the WaitlistEnvelope encryption with AWS KMS hardware security modules. When your machine sleeps, the plaintext key exists nowhere — not on disk, not in any database, not in any persistent storage.
Outcry has control of your machine, with access to an activist knowledge base spanning radical theory, protest tactics, and movement case studies. Ask it to draft strategy informed by historical precedent, and it writes the document to your encrypted filesystem.
Every OutcryOS connects to every other via WireGuard-encrypted tunnels. Peer-to-peer when possible, through our self-hosted relay when not. The transport layer sees only ciphertext. The mesh strengthens as more people join.
What you can do on this thing
A CRDT-based editor so two organizers can co-edit a strategy document with conflicts resolved automatically. Edits made offline merge cleanly when connectivity returns.
Relationship management designed for movement work. Cells, groups, trust designations — the social graph of a campaign without exposing legal identity.
A canary that auto-notifies your contacts and can wipe your files if you fail to check in. Because some of the people who need this tool operate in environments where that feature is planning, not paranoia.
Plus: encrypted pastebin with IPFS pinning, media vault, offline queue, and more. The goal is an OS with applications anyone can add.
Who This Is For
You already know the cost of fragmentation. You know what it feels like to hold an entire campaign's operational security in your head because no single tool covers it. We built this for you. Not to replace your judgment, but to give it a place to live — persistent, encrypted, connected, and yours.
The question isn't just whether your grantees have secure communications. It's whether they have secure infrastructure — compute, storage, AI, coordination tools that work together under their control. Communication is one layer. An operating system is all of them.
If what you need isn't an API call but an environment — a place where the AI and the tools and the encrypted infrastructure are unified — then the OS is what we've been building toward all along.
Early Access
OutcryOS is in alpha. We're prioritizing organizers and movement workers. Join the waitlist and we'll be in touch when it's your turn.