You will not find a wall of five-star testimonials here. A privacy host that invents happy customers has already told you how it treats the truth. Instead, HushVPS publishes the things you can actually verify — a signed canary, a no-logs statement in plain language, an honest request ledger, and rules we will not break.
This used to be a testimonials page. We took it down. Quotes with stock-photo faces prove nothing about how a host behaves when a court order arrives, or whether traffic is quietly logged. Anyone can type "best VPS ever — anonymous, 100% private" into a review widget. So we replaced marketing theatre with primary sources you can inspect yourself.
Trust, for an anonymous no-KYC host, is not a feeling we ask you to have. It is a set of documents and behaviours you can audit: what we sign, what we collect, what we hand over, and what we refuse. Everything below links to a real artefact, not a slogan.
Read them in any order. Each one is maintained by the operator and updated when reality changes, not on a marketing calendar.
A PGP-signed statement that we have received no secret orders or gag requests. It is dated and re-signed on a fixed cadence. If it stops updating, that silence is itself the signal.
Read the canaryThe honest ledger of legal and abuse requests we receive and how we answer them. Where a real figure is not yet published you will see a placeholder — never an invented statistic.
Open the reportPlain language on what we do and do not keep. No access logs, no request logs, no traffic records tying an account to activity. The privacy policy lists the short set of things we must retain to run the service.
Read what we collectPrivacy is not lawlessness. The AUP draws a hard line: no CSAM, no malware distribution, no spam operations, no DDoS. Offshore-legal and data-minimising, not "anything goes".
Read the AUPThese are commitments, not aspirations. If any of them ever changes, it changes here first — in writing.
We do not have an advertising business, a data-broker contract, or an analytics pipeline that ships your behaviour to a third party. There is nothing to sell because we do not gather it.
No invented testimonials, no fabricated uptime percentages, no imaginary customer or server counts. If we cannot prove a number, we do not print it as fact.
There is no secret logging tier we do not disclose. What the no-logs statement says is what the systems actually do; the gap between marketing and infrastructure is where most "no-logs" claims quietly fail.
No KYC, no ID documents, no named payment cards. We bill in Monero so that paying for a server does not create a paper trail leading back to you.
Do not take our word for any of this. Here is exactly how to check, without asking us to reveal anything about yourself.
Import our public key and check the signature on the warrant canary yourself. A valid signature confirms the canary genuinely came from the key we publish, unaltered.
Key fingerprint: available via the contact form
The canary is re-signed on a regular schedule. A missed or late update is meaningful on its own — check the date on every visit.
We aim to be listed on independent, no-KYC-friendly directories where available. Independent scrutiny beats anything we say about ourselves.
A listing on a third-party directory is not an endorsement we control, and inclusion criteria change over time. Treat external listings as one data point among several, alongside the signed canary and the transparency ledger.
Honesty about experience and identity cuts both ways for an anonymous host. We deliberately do not publish operator names, because a privacy service whose staff are doxxable is a privacy service with a pressure point. What we can tell you is what we operate: a data-minimising, Monero-billed VPS platform run by people who use the same threat model as our customers.
Our expertise shows up in the artefacts, not in a bio. The signed canary, the structure of the request ledger, and the specificity of the no-logs statement are the credentials. If you spot something inconsistent across those documents, that is exactly the kind of thing we want reported — reach us over an encrypted channel from the contact page.
Read the primary sources, check the signature, and only then judge whether HushVPS is trustworthy. That is the whole point of publishing them.