A record of your life that
outlives us all.
Every entry pinned to the open network with a public proof you can check yourself — today, in fifty years, and after we’re gone. No AI training. No data sales. No surveillance. Your words stay yours — provably.
Listen · the legacy you leave
When a platform shuts down, the memories vanish with it — across this industry that is the rule, not the exception. Living Legacy is built so that cannot happen to yours. Most platforms tell you that you own your content; we let you verify it independently of us. Every entry you publish is pinned permanently on the open IPFS network with a public Content Identifier (CID) you can retrieve from any gateway worldwide — today, in fifty years, and after we’re gone. No AI training, no advertising, no third-party data sales. Ever. See the difference →
How Living Legacy works now
Capture your life freely in your own journal, then seal the moments worth keeping, a dollar each — or become a Keeper for $50 a year and keep unlimited moments, with 100 sealed forever included. The same Seals, the same purse, whether you’re keeping your own days or honoring someone who has passed. See all four tiers →
Record your days — voice, video, photos, notes — in your own private journal on your device, encrypted with a key only you hold.
Begin your record →When a moment is worth keeping, spend one Seal: it is pinned to the open network — IPFS and Filecoin, paid once — and given a public proof you and your heirs can verify. Bought in prepaid Rolls, $10 and up.
Get Seals — a $10 Roll →Keep unlimited moments — and 100 sealed forever each year, included. Plus the Family Web to share your legacy with family, your standing as a Keeper, and early access to what’s coming. Seal more anytime by the Roll.
Become a Keeper →The one-time covenant: a whole life bound into an heirloom — dual-network permanence, on-chain proof, and the succession engine that names your heirs and the terms on which your record reaches them, set in a medallion you hand down.
900+ ancestors already kept in the public archive — join them.
- ✓ Secure checkout by Stripe — we never see your card number
- ✓ Seals are a one-time payment — pay only when you keep a moment
- ✓ A $10 Roll is 10 Seals — yours until you spend them
Every sealed moment carries a content-addressed fingerprint you can verify on the open IPFS network. Questions before you buy? info@honoredancestors.net.
Live today: free capture in The Journal, $1 Seals for verifiable IPFS-pinned permanence, public proof you can check yourself at /ipfs/, and all eight Guiding Principles applied to every entry.
Coming next: the Eternal covenant — the Muhuri — with the succession engine: name your heirs and the terms on which your record reaches them — plus cross-device sync.
Existing annual and Eternal members keep their archives and access exactly as before — nothing changes for you.
What you get: free unlimited capture in your own journal, $1-per-moment IPFS permanence with a public proof, the timeline interface, and all eight Guiding Principles applied to every entry.
What you don’t get: ads, tracking, AI training on your content, surprise TOS changes, or cloud storage that vanishes when we pivot. What you Seal stays yours and remains retrievable from IPFS, forever — membership or not.
Powered by Stripe. We never see your card details. Keep by the moment with $1 Seals, or become a Keeper for $50 a year.
Four promises, in plain language
You keep copyright and ownership of everything you publish — the license you grant us is for hosting only, never commercial use, syndication, or third-party licensing, and any future derivative use would need your separate, explicit permission. Every entry is pinned to the open IPFS network with a public Content Identifier, so it resolves on any gateway even if our site goes dark (Guiding Principle 4 — we only claim permanence we can prove). The only outside parties we touch are Stripe for payment and Let’s Encrypt for security; no advertising, no tracking, and your words are never used to train any AI (Guiding Principles 5 and 6). And when you pass, the executor you name at signup lets your family choose what happens — publish it as a public memorial, keep it to family, or preserve it offline — while the IPFS records survive independently (Guiding Principle 8).
See a live example → a steward’s archive with a verifiable IPFS record. Why the build years matter →