Why I Built a 100% Private File Converter Using WebAssembly (No Server Uploads)

Why I Built a 100% Private File Converter Using WebAssembly (No Server Uploads)

Most "free" online file converters are a privacy nightmare. When you upload a PDF or an image to "https://www.google.com/search?q=ConvertMyFile.com," your sensitive data is sitting on a random server. I wanted to change that. That’s why I built FileMint. 🛠 The Problem with Cloud Processing
Traditional tools use the "Upload-Process-Download" model. This is slow (due to upload speeds) and risky for privacy. If you are merging a legal contract or a personal photo, you shouldn't have to trust a third-party server. ⚡ The Solution: Client-Side WebAssembly
To make FileMint truly private, I decided that zero files should ever leave the user's browser. I achieved this using: WebAssembly (WASM): For heavy lifting like PDF merging and image compression. By using C++ and Rust libraries compiled to WASM, the browser gets near-native speeds. JavaScript File API: To handle file streams locally without a backend. React & Tailwind: For a clean, fast UI that works on mobile and desktop. 🔒 Why Privacy-First Matters
Since the processing happens in the user's RAM, there is: Zero Latency: No waiting for files to upload. Zero Data Leaks: I literally cannot see your files even if I wanted to. Offline Access: Once the site is loaded, it works without an internet connection. I’ve launched over 30 tools including a JSON to CSV Converter and a Secure PDF Merger. What’s Next?
I’m currently looking into adding OCR (Optical Character Recognition) entirely in the browser using Tesseract.js. Check out the project here: https://www.filemint.dev/ I’d love to hear your thoughts on the architecture. How are you handling file privacy in your web apps? Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Are you sure you want to ? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink. as well , this person and/or