After Numa Pompilius, who built institutions that outlasted kings.
Block ads and trackers. Override DNS for development. Cache for speed. A single portable binary built from scratch in Rust — no Raspberry Pi, no cloud, no account. Your DNS travels with you.
Every time you visit a website, you ask a DNS resolver where to go. That resolver sees every domain you visit, when, and how often.
Today, a handful of operators control this infrastructure. ICANN governs the root. Registrars can seize domains. Governments compel censorship. Your ISP logs your queries by default.
The protocol that underpins the entire internet has no built-in privacy, no cryptographic ownership, and no way for users to choose who they trust.
Numa starts as a practical developer tool and evolves toward a decentralized network. Each layer stands on its own.
Every query walks through the same deterministic pipeline. Local data takes priority; the network is the fallback.
Choose resolvers from a decentralized marketplace based on latency, privacy, and reputation
Stake tokens, run Numa nodes, earn rewards proportional to verified service quality
Send challenge queries from diverse locations, verify correctness and latency
Accounting, reputation scores, reward distribution, slashing proofs
| Pi-hole | NextDNS | Cloudflare | AdGuard Home | Numa | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ad & tracker blocking | Yes | Yes | Limited | Yes | 385K+ domains |
| Portable (travels with laptop) | No (Raspberry Pi) | Cloud only | Cloud only | No (network appliance) | Single binary |
| Developer overrides | No | No | No | No | REST API + auto-expiry |
| Data stays local | Yes | Cloud | Cloud | Yes | 100% local |
| Live dashboard | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Real-time + controls |
| Zero config needed | Complex setup | Yes | Yes | Docker/setup | Works out of the box |
| Self-sovereign DNS roadmap | No | No | No | No | pkarr / DHT |