File transfer
Send big files without the cloud
RVNT is a messenger and a peer-to-peer file-sharing network. On a direct link it streams files of any size with resume-on-disconnect and no server copy. Here’s how that works for the cases where ordinary tools give up — and the honest caveats.
Send a 50 GB file A single ~50 GB file is exactly where free upload-to-a-server tools break — and exactly what a direct peer-to-peer connection is built for. Send a 100 GB file A 100 GB transfer is impossible on every free consumer service and most paid ones — RVNT can do it, but only over a direct peer-to-peer connection; a relay fallback is capped at 256 MB. Send a 1 TB file Mainstream transfer services top out in the single-digit gigabytes and keep a copy on their servers — RVNT streams the file directly peer-to-peer with no size limit on a direct link, no plaintext ever touching disk, and resume if the connection drops. Send files with no size limit On a direct peer-to-peer connection RVNT streams files of any size with no server copy; over a relay fallback the cap is 256 MB. Peer-to-peer file transfer True peer-to-peer file transfer moves bytes directly from your device to the recipient's, with no upload to a third-party server — RVNT does this natively over an encrypted connection, with no size limit on a direct link and resume-on-disconnect. Send files without the cloud Mainstream file senders upload your file to their servers and keep a copy. On a direct RVNT transfer, the file streams peer-to-peer and no server ever holds it.