The architectural insight, patent portfolio, anonymous token infrastructure, and SUKHA Framework that make proactive mental health support possible at scale — without ever identifying a single individual.
Every existing mental health platform follows the same model: collect identity first, promise to protect it second. But in any culture where identification itself prevents help-seeking, the sequence is fundamentally broken.
Dimple's architectural breakthrough: you can verify that someone belongs to an institution without ever knowing who they are. Untraceable cryptographic tokens verify affiliation — without revealing identity. This enables population-level insight into hidden patterns of human need while maintaining complete anonymity.
That same architecture — anonymous, proactive, and culturally particular — works in any setting where consequences follow visibility. Education is the entry point. The architecture extends far beyond it.
Defining and leading the anonymous architecture space. Globally.
With Dr. Narayanan Rajendran — co-inventor of UPI and the architect of infrastructure that now processes eighteen billion transactions monthly across India — Dimple is anchoring the category. The work encompasses the full arc of where identity technology is heading: from post-quantum cryptographic transition to the emergence of zero-knowledge proof systems and self-sovereign identity frameworks.
Anchored by Australian Provisional № 2025904712, the PCT international filing, and the Indian complete application prepared by Mulla & Mulla ahead of the October 2026 Paris Convention deadline.
The objective is singular — to become, and remain, the global leader in anonymous institutional infrastructure.
Not private. Invisible. There's a difference — and it's the difference between someone asking for help or not.
Users access counsellors, crisis support, and wellness tools with no name, no email, and no phone number — leaving no trace that anyone can find.
Dimple's intelligence is built to know its users — not by identifying them, but by learning the patterns underneath them. Help-seeking behaviour shaped by region. Crisis signals coded by language. Cultural triggers that change the meaning of a single word across a border. The platform generates anonymous, longitudinal data on all of it, across cultures, languages, and geographies — something no other platform has, and no one else can get.
At the heart of this dataset are our culturally contextualised Be Ready Resources — structured, localised content designed to meet young people where they are, in their own language and cultural frame. These resources don't just support users; they drive the data. Every interaction generates anonymous, longitudinal insight into help-seeking behaviour, resource effectiveness, and wellbeing trajectories across diverse populations. The entire resource library and its clinical integrity are governed and monitored by the SUKHA Council, ensuring that cultural safety, evidence-based practice, and ethical oversight are embedded at every level.
What the District Magistrate sees. Population-level insight.
Zero individual identifiers.