The story

A layer that was missing.

For two centuries, technology has been pulling us toward people we'll never meet — and quietly, away from the people standing right next to us.

H2H Protocol was built to fix that.

Why this exists

A missing layer between the internet and the room.

We believe there is a missing layer between the global internet and the people physically around us. The technology to find each other in the same room has been in our pockets for a decade. Until now, no one had built it for ordinary moments.

H2H Proximity is that layer — quiet, local, and respectful of the humans inside it. A traveler at the next gate. A neighbor with what you've been searching for. A stranger who needs help right now. Someone who feels what you feel, in the building you're already in.

We built H2H because the room you're in deserves a way for the people in it to find each other — without surveillance, without performance, without surrendering the privacy or dignity of being a stranger in a public place.

How we build

Designed deliberately, not iteratively.

H2H is designed deliberately, not iteratively. Every decision — what data we collect, what we encrypt, what we never store, how the radar shows you nothing it shouldn't — was made with care, defended through eight months of engineering, and held to a single standard: the product earns the trust of the people who use it.

We don't ask for your real name. We don't track your location. We don't sell your conversations to anyone, for any reason, ever.

These aren't policies — they are the architecture.

Who we are

A small team in Oman.

H2H Protocol is built in the Sultanate of Oman, by a small team that believes considered work is worth the time it takes. We hold a high bar for what ships. We listen to the people who use what we build. We do not chase trends.

We are part of Khader International, a private holding company building deliberate ventures across technology, engineering, and trade.

The promise

What we owe you.

We will not surprise you. We will not change the rules quietly. We will not break what we have promised in the documents that govern this product.

If something here ever feels wrong, tell us. We will read it ourselves.

— The H2H Protocol team