GDPR

The Freelancer Guide to Securely sharing NDA Documents in 2026

Independent Contractor handle Non-disclosure agreements every day. Most forward them insecurely without realizing the risk.

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The Real Risk

A freelance developer receives WordPress admin credentials via Gmail from a client. The developer's Gmail account is compromised months later, giving attackers access to dozens of client sites through the stored credential emails.

Consequence: client website defacement, data loss, legal liability for breach, and permanent reputation damage

How to do it securely — step by step

1

Go to CipherEdge (no account required)

Visit CipherEdge.com and type or paste your nda documents directly into the secure compose box. The interface works entirely in your browser — nothing is sent until you encrypt it.

2

Set your delivery options

Choose how long the secret should last (1 hour, 24 hours, or 7 days) and how many times it can be viewed (default: 1 view, burns after reading). Freelancers typically use 1 view for nda documents to ensure it cannot be forwarded.

3

Encrypt — your nda documents never leaves your browser in plaintext

Click "Encrypt & Create Link." Your browser uses AES-256-GCM encryption locally — the encrypted data is encrypted before it reaches any server. Our infrastructure only ever sees the encrypted bytes, not the original content.

4

Share the one-time link

You receive a unique URL. The decryption key is embedded in the URL fragment (the part after #) — this fragment is never transmitted to our servers per HTTP protocol specification. Send this link via any channel — email, Slack, or SMS.

5

Recipient opens once — then it's gone

When your recipient clicks the link, the nda documents decrypts locally in their browser, simultaneously triggering permanent deletion from our servers. Any subsequent access to the same URL returns a 404 — the data no longer exists anywhere.

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No account needed. Encrypt and send in 30 seconds. Your data never reaches our servers in readable form.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How do lawyers securely share NDAs with opposing counsel?
As a freelancer, the safest way to handle nda documents is to encrypt it client-side before transmission. CipherEdge uses AES-256-GCM encryption in your browser — the server infrastructure never sees the plaintext. Combined with burn-after-reading and configurable TTLs, this ensures nda documents exists only for as long as it needs to.
What is the risk of emailing NDA drafts?
When you email nda documents, the data is permanently stored on multiple mail servers, backed up, and potentially accessible to email administrators, corporate IT departments, and government agencies with subpoenas. Unlike a self-destructing link, email creates an immutable, searchable record. For freelancers specifically, freelancers regularly exchange login credentials and api keys with clients, with no corporate security infrastructure to protect these exchanges. a single compromised email can expose an entire client's production environment.
Can I send an NDA that self-destructs after signing?
As a freelancer, the safest way to handle nda documents is to encrypt it client-side before transmission. CipherEdge uses AES-256-GCM encryption in your browser — the server infrastructure never sees the plaintext. Combined with burn-after-reading and configurable TTLs, this ensures nda documents exists only for as long as it needs to.
Is this compliant for Freelancers sending nda documents?
GDPR Article 32 requires appropriate technical measures for data protection. CipherEdge's zero-knowledge architecture means we process no personal data — we only store encrypted bytes we cannot read. This satisfies the GDPR principle of data minimization.
What happens to my nda documents after the recipient reads it?
The moment your recipient opens the link and the nda documents is decrypted in their browser, it is simultaneously deleted from our infrastructure. The deletion is atomic — it happens in the same operation as the read. There is no recovery, no backup, and no copy anywhere on our servers. The data exists only in the recipient's browser until they close or navigate away.