Warrant Canary
Transparency · last updated June 13, 2026
Status: Active. No legal orders have been received as of June 13, 2026.
AURORA WARRANT CANARY
Last updated: June 13, 2026
Developed by: Christian Lim Correa
As of the date above, Christian Lim Correa, developer of Aurora, hereby states:
1. No secret court orders, gag orders, national security letters,
or any other legal compulsion to provide user data has been
received by the Aurora project.
2. No government agency has demanded access to user data,
encryption keys, or any Aurora infrastructure.
3. No backdoors have been introduced into Aurora's software,
server infrastructure, or cryptographic systems at the
request of any government or third party.
4. Aurora has not been compromised by any external party
to the best of our knowledge.
5. User data has not been provided to any third party
voluntarily or under compulsion.
6. Aurora has not been modified at the request of any
government or third party to surveil, log, or otherwise
compromise user privacy.
Shutdown clause: If Aurora is ever compelled to act against
the privacy of its users in any way that cannot be disclosed,
the project will be shut down publicly rather than comply
silently. The source code will remain available regardless.
This statement is updated monthly. If this canary is not
updated, or if any statement above is removed or altered,
users should treat that as a signal that the situation
has changed.
- Christian Lim Correa
Aurora Project
christiancorrea26@gmail.com
What is a warrant canary?
A warrant canary is a public statement that a service has not received certain kinds of legal demand. Because some legal orders come with gag clauses that forbid disclosure, the canary works in reverse: as long as the statement is present and updated, all is well. If it disappears or changes, that itself is the signal.
Aurora publishes this because you shouldn't have to take our word for our privacy practices. It's one way we hold ourselves publicly accountable.
How to verify
This page is updated monthly. If more than 45 days pass without an update, treat it as a signal that something has changed; the current update date is always shown at the top. Aurora is open source: the application, the rendezvous server, and its configuration are public for independent review on GitHub.
Next scheduled update: July 13, 2026.