In brief

  • BChat is an open-source privacy-preserving decentralized messaging app.
  • The app minimizes metadata collection and does not require a phone number to register.
  • The app is built atop Beldex Network, which also plays host to onion-routing VPN BelNet, Web3 browser Beldex Browser, and the Beldex Privacy Protocol.

Among activists, journalists, or merely private citizens concerned about government encroachment on their communications, being able to message securely and privately is one of the highest priorities. But with even some of the most advanced messaging apps like WhatsApp and Telegram showing willingness to share users’ metadata with governments under certain legal circumstances, finding a truly secure platform to communicate via is increasingly challenging.

Blockchain technology, though it initially attracted interest due to its privacy-preserving characteristics, is not necessarily anonymous by design—particularly non-privacy-focused blockchains like Bitcoin. Law enforcement and investigators have become increasingly proficient at tracing the real identities of individuals controlling wallets in recent years, such as in the aftermath of the 2016 Bitfinex hack or the 2021 Colonial Pipeline ransomware attack.

BChat, rolled out publicly in 2022, was designed specifically to preserve users’ privacy, going a step beyond conventional protections like end-to-end encryption (E2EE), which is common among mainstream messaging apps like WhatsApp, Signal, iMessage and Telegram's Secret Chats.

What Is BChat?

BChat is an open-source privacy-focused messaging app available for Android, iOS, Windows, macOS, and Linux. It is designed to protect user privacy by removing phone number requirements for registration and minimizing metadata collection.

It represents just one part of the Beldex ecosystem, including onion-routing VPN BelNet, Web3 browser Beldex Browser, and the Beldex Privacy Protocol, which can be used to increase cross-chain anonymity.

How Does BChat Work?

BChat allows users to message friends and family through what should be a fairly familiar-looking user interface. Users can send encrypted messages routed via nodes on the Beldex network, which contains over 2,000 masternodes in total, with each message routed through a series of nodes at least three times.

BChat uses the same open-source TextSecure encryption protocol which Signal was originally based on. Like mainstream messaging apps such as WhatsApp, it also offers a fully fleshed-out feature set, including group chats, disappearing messages, and the ability to send images, videos, and voice notes.

What’s so special about BChat?

Unlike apps like WhatsApp and Telegram, which incorporate E2EE, BChat aims to let users avoid disclosing metadata entirely.

E2EE protects the messages themselves—even from the platform which facilitates them—but it does not hide key details like when a message was sent, who it was sent to, or when it was read. These details can provide important clues during surveillance or investigations and may even be used as legal evidence when establishing alibis or timelines in some jurisdictions such as the U.S.

BChat doesn’t rely on conventional phone numbers for account creation, which are a necessity to register for other apps like Signal. Instead, it uses a 24–26-word recovery seed (mnemonic phrase), a 64–66-character BChat ID, and a corresponding Beldex wallet address when a user opens an account.

If the seed phrase is lost, then the account will remain inaccessible forever. BChat maintains its identity layer entirely as a cryptographic abstraction, with as few links to users' real identities as possible. For ease of use, the Beldex Name Service (BNS) allows users to map a human-readable .bdx name to their 64-character BChat ID, for example, John-Smith.bdx. This name can then be used across the Beldex ecosystem.

Phone numbers or email addresses—even disposable “burner” numbers—can provide clues about a user’s identity, particularly if they are used elsewhere, such as on social media platforms or for website and app-based two-factor authentication.

In 2021, an FBI document first reported by Rolling Stone showed that the FBI was able to access metadata from WhatsApp messages. Though the content of the messages themselves was inaccessible due to E2E encryption, the government agency was still able to access information such as when the message was sent.

In a 2018 case, former Treasury Department official Natalie Edwards was sentenced to six months in jail after being convicted of leaking government reports with BuzzFeed via WhatsApp. According to the court document, she shared “approximately 70 messages” with a particular BuzzFeed reporter the day after an article was published referencing the documents.

What is Beldex (BDX)?

Beldex (BDX) is the native utility asset of the Beldex network, on top of which BChat is built. Users are assigned a unique Beldex address alongside their BChat ID, which connects their identity to the wider ecosystem. BChat’s seed phrase is also compatible with the Beldex wallet app, meaning that a single seed phrase can serve both applications. As an interoperable ecosystem, BDX can be used across Beldex-powered platforms and services.

What’s next for BChat

As some mainstream platforms like Instagram roll back their limited support for E2E encryption, BChat continues to add new features, providing the type of user-friendly functionality users are accustomed to. Over the past year or so, BChat has integrated emoji reactions as well as new text formatting tools, including support for bold, italics, and strikethrough text.

In Q2 2026, the Beldex blockchain will incorporate Dandelion++ into its codebase, a network-level protocol designed to prevent activity on the network from being traced or correlated.

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