There's something almost nobody knows about push notifications: when implemented correctly, the content is end-to-end encrypted. It travels across the internet like a sealed envelope, and only your device holds the key to open it.
Not even the server that sent it can read the contents in transit. Not even MINOMO.
We know that sounds odd. We're the ones sending the notification, and yet, once it leaves our server, it's technically impossible for anyone to intercept what's inside. That's not a marketing claim. It's mathematics, and it's verifiable by anyone who wants to check the open standards it's built on.
We wrote a page that explains exactly how it works. No unnecessary jargon, no hand-waving. What happens from the moment a merchant hits "send" to the moment the notification appears on your screen. Which technology encrypts it, who can read it, what we collect and why, and how you can stop receiving notifications in a single click — no emails, no forms, no waiting for someone on the other end to process your request.
If you've ever wondered how much you actually know about that small notification landing on your phone, the answer is here: → MINOMO notifications, actually explained