Data to people. Science to data. Power to user.
Enter access code
The vault opens 2027.You are early. We will be in touch.
Data to people. Science to data. Power to user.
Enter access code
The vault opens 2027.You are early. We will be in touch.
About
A thousand apps to manage your money. Nothing to manage your own data. Why is that?
Data about you is everywhere. It's how Netflix knows what to play next, how Maps knows where you take your coffee. The rings, the watches, the logged sleep and meals and workouts. Mountains of data, about you, generated by you. And almost none of it is yours. It's scattered, held by other people, and the only version that ever comes back is the one built to sell you something.
In Europe, that is already changing. By law, your data is yours: to access, to move, to take with you. The most powerful personal data rights framework in the world, already on the books.
Brussels built the framework.
Nobody built the interface.
That is N'27. The first place your data actually shows up for you, instead of for someone else. Coming 2027.
Data to people.
Science to data.
Power to user.
Founder

Founder, N'27. The interface for your own data. Europe built the rights. I'm building the way to use them.
You don't have to care about data to need what N'27 makes possible. I didn't.
Before this I built H2YO: fresh drinks made on the spot, zero waste, with a patent to personalize each one to your own biometrics. The healthiest, most sustainable drink we could make. But "tailored to you" was the part we couldn't deliver, because true personalization needs your real data, and there's no way for you to bring it. The drink was never the point. The missing layer underneath it was.
Here's how I think it plays out. Thirty years ago, almost nobody had an email address. Then everybody did, and "what's your email?" became a normal thing to ask a stranger. Your data is next. One day you'll set up your N'27 account the way you once set up your first inbox, and start actually operating with what's yours, instead of picking from a menu someone else built for you.
That's what I'm building now. The conviction is simple: people should own and control their own data, and in Europe the law already says they can. The work now is turning that from words on paper into something you can actually use.
Reach