I just realized something uncomfortable. And I think you need to hear it too.
Let me ask you something.
When was the last time a government website rejected your document for being "too large"?
Last week? Last month? Yesterday?
And what did you do?
You Googled "compress PDF online," clicked whatever came first, and uploaded your Aadhaar without a second thought.
I know because I did the exact same thing. Multiple times.
And then one day it hit me.
I just handed my Aadhaar — my name, my address, my date of birth, my 12-digit number that's linked to my bank, my SIM, my entire identity — to a website I knew absolutely nothing about.
I don't know who runs it.
I don't know which country their servers are in.
I don't know who has database access.
The site said "files deleted in 24 hours."
Cool. But... says who? Their own website? That's like a restaurant grading their own hygiene.
The thing that really got me though?
You can change your password after a breach.
You can block your card if it leaks.
You can even get a new phone number.
You cannot get a new Aadhaar.
That number is yours for life. Which means if it leaks — it leaks forever. There's no "forgot Aadhaar, reset via email" option. It's just... out there.
And we're casually uploading it to compress-pdf-free-online-tool-dot-com because a government form had a 500KB limit.
Think about that for a second.
This isn't about being paranoid.
This is just a completely normal thing that millions of Indians do every single day — because the system forces you to, and nobody built a safer option.
Job applications. Bank KYC. College admissions. Government schemes. Every single one asks for your Aadhaar. Every single portal has a file size limit. And Google helpfully serves up a random third-party compressor at the top of the results.
It almost feels designed to go wrong.
So I built Fileora.
Not because I'm some privacy activist. Honestly I just got genuinely annoyed that this problem existed and nobody had fixed it properly.
Fileora compresses and converts files completely inside your browser. Your Aadhaar never leaves your device. There's no upload happening in the background, no cloud server touching your file, no 24-hour deletion promise that you just have to take on faith.
It just... works. Locally. On your machine. In seconds.
No account. No email. No "we take your privacy seriously" paragraph that means nothing.
I'm not saying the other tools are definitely stealing your data.
Maybe they're not. Maybe every single one of them is completely legitimate and deletes everything exactly when they say they do.
But why take that chance with something you can never replace?
You wouldn't hand your Aadhaar to a random guy on the street to photocopy it at his shop around the corner.
But somehow, doing it on a website with a clean UI feels different.
It really shouldn't.
Give Fileora — free, private PDF compression a try the next time a portal rejects your file.
Your Aadhaar stays on your device. That's a promise that doesn't need a privacy policy — because there's no server involved in the first place.
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