No landlord. No shareholder. No terms of service written by someone else. Every server below is owned outright.
While the world begs Google to read their mail for free, this inbox answers to exactly one authority: its owner.
An AI that answers the phone, sells the line, and provisions itself — while every competitor still hires a human to do it worse.
Domain, website, and mailbox — one checkout, one owner, none of the three-vendor circus everyone else tolerates.
Zero logs isn't a marketing slogan here — there is no company to subpoena, because there is no company. Just a server we own.
A search engine that has never once wondered how to monetize you, because it was never built to.
Every product above began as a bill. A subscription, a rented seat, a company standing between the work and the person doing it.
So the bill got replaced with a server. Not a metaphor — an actual machine, in an actual datacenter, with an actual root password.
Sovereignty isn't a feature. It's the whole point. Nobody revokes access to hardware you own. Nobody changes the terms on a service with no terms to change.
Rich Communications has operated this way since 2014. RichMegaWorld is simply the map of what that decade became.