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April 29, 2026

ZKTOR’s Larger Story, A Trust-Led Indian Digital Ecosystem for South Asia

By Agency
ZKTOR’s Larger Story, A Trust-Led Indian Digital Ecosystem for South Asia

Press Conference Held at Constitution Club of India, New Delhi.

The rise of ZKTOR is best understood not as the launch of another social media app, but as an Indian attempt to redesign digital participation around trust, dignity and local reality. Developed by Softa Technologies, ZKTOR is being positioned for an era shaped by artificial intelligence, deepfakes, cyber insecurity and growing discomfort with platforms that convert attention, behaviour and personal data into commercial raw material. Its architecture places protection at the core through privacy and data safety by designZero Knowledge Server ArchitectureNo URL Media Architecture, no behaviour tracking and default multi-layer encryption.

This matters deeply in India and South Asia, where vast rural populations, uneven digital literacy, linguistic diversity, family comfort and social reputation still decide how technology enters everyday life. ZKTOR’s early resonance with Gen Z and young women reflects this shift. For them, digital safety is not only a technical feature; it is social security, emotional comfort and control over exposure. A cleaner, predictable and more dignified platform can make online participation safer in homes, small towns, villages and shared community spaces.

At the centre is Sunil Kumar Singh, founder of Softa Technologies, whose thinking blends rural Bihar roots with more than two decades in Finland’s disciplined, restrained and rights-conscious design culture. Singh argues that user-protection technologies were never absent; the will to make them default was. His critique of the “I accept” model is direct: millions of rural and digitally vulnerable users are pushed into complex terms, privacy policies and data clauses they neither read nor meaningfully understand. For Singh, privacy by design, No URL Media Architecture and misuse prevention are not decorative innovations, but ethical design choices.

Softa’s wider ecosystem gives this philosophy economic depth. Subkuz is being built for hyperlocal news and diaspora, Ezowm for hyperlocal commerce, Hola AI as the intelligence and safety layer, and ZHAN as a transparent hyperlocal advertising network. ZHAN targets India’s existing but fragmented local advertising economy, still driven by newspapers, radio, agencies and district networks, especially where language, trust, proximity and relationships matter more than broad digital reach. Softa’s aim is not to invent the local market, but to organise it digitally.

Less than six months after Singh introduced ZKTOR at New Delhi’s Constitution Club of India, the platform expanded from India into Nepal, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, crossing half a million beta users, largely Gen Z. Encouraged by strong acceptance among young users and women, Softa now plans beta rollout in Bhutan, Pakistan and Maldives, turning ZKTOR into a South Asian test case for Indian trust-led technology.

Prominent South Asian coverage has highlighted Singh’s refusal of foreign VC funding and Finland/EU grants to keep ZKTOR free from external, political or institutional pressure. Softa claims an ISRO-like operating model, running ZKTOR 7–8 times cheaper than big-tech platforms, reinforcing the idea that world-class technology can be built with discipline, restraint and national intent.

Singh’s larger vision is district-level digital infrastructure under one national brand with local identities, connecting social media, commerce, creators, entertainment, news, governance, civil society, education, police, judiciary and citizens. Softa believes this can create lakhs of direct jobs for local partners, campaign managers and digital operators, empower small, women-led and home-based businesses, reduce youth migration, build rural confidence, digitise India’s vast unstructured economy, unlock GDP value and serve Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Vision 2047 as a technology mission dedicated to India.

In that sense, ZKTOR’s deeper claim is strategic: India can build and export a digital model that protects users, respects culture, strengthens creators, organises local economies and turns trust itself into infrastructure for South Asia’s next digital decade.

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Jack ThomsonApr 29, 2026

Finally a social app that cares about privacy, Loving ZKTOR

J
Jhilmil AhujaApr 29, 2026

Our family of five has been using Zktor since its launch. In the beginning, it had some performance issues, but the team worked hard to improve it within just a few months. Now, with version 21, it has become a powerful alternative to other social platforms, offering a high level of privacy and data security. It also inspires and makes Indian tech professionals and students feel proud.

ZKTOR: India’s Trust-First Social Platform Redefining Digital Participation in South Asia | Daily Pioneer