Build the future of Numberless with us

Build the future of Numberless with us

Feature request

Have an idea that would make Port better? Send it out way, we'd love to hear it.

Have an idea that would make Port better? Send it out way, we'd love to hear it.

Have an idea that would make Port better? Send it out way, we'd love to hear it.

Add request

Report a bug

We’ll squash every bug you spot — no matter how small. If something feels off, let us know!

We’ll squash every bug you spot — no matter how small. If something feels off, let us know!

Report

Port Protocol

Surprised by our lack of identifiers? Sometimes we are too. Check out the Port Protocol to know more.

Curious about how Port works without any unique identifiers? Check out the Port Protocol

Read more

Roadmap to open source

Roadmap to open source

Roadmap to open source

Why we want to go open source?

Why we want to go open source?

We don’t just want your feedback — we’d love for you to inspect the code, patch bugs, and help shape the protocol with us. We know this matters to you — and it matters to us too.

More importantly, it gives you control. You don’t have to take our word on privacy. You can read the code and verify it yourself. If there’s a fix you want, a vulnerability you spotted, or a feature you're eager to build — we’d love your help.


TL;DR: We want to go open source because communication belongs to everyone, and everyone deserves a hand in shaping it.

We don’t just want your feedback — we’d love for you to inspect the code, patch bugs, and help shape the protocol with us. We know this matters to you — and it matters to us too.

More importantly, it gives you control. You don’t have to take our word on privacy. You can read the code and verify it yourself. If there’s a fix you want, a vulnerability you spotted, or a feature you're eager to build — we’d love your help.


TL;DR: We want to go open source because the best software is built in public.

What’s holding us back?

What’s holding us back?

We need to tidy things up a bit. That means better flows, cleaner code, and a smoother local setup. We're making sure our documentation is rock solid, so contributing doesn’t feel frustrating. We're also fixing naming conventions, restructuring key parts of the codebase, and cleaning up edge cases that have built up over time.


TL;DR: We’re making it easier (and nicer) for you to jump in, understand the code, and build with us.

We need to tidy things up a bit. That means better flows, cleaner code, and a smoother local setup. We're making sure our documentation is rock solid, so contributing doesn’t feel frustrating. We're also fixing naming conventions, restructuring key parts of the codebase, and cleaning up edge cases that have built up over time.


TL;DR: We’re making it easier (and nicer) for you to jump in, understand the code, and build with us.

Got thoughts? Got code? Got feelings? Here's a direct line to our CTO

Got thoughts? Got code? Got feelings? Here's a direct line to our CTO