# MySudo

> Source: https://fuckyc.org/services/mysudo/
> Website: https://mysudo.com/
> Categories: Anonymous SIM / eSIM
> KYC: enforced — U.S. operator; signup binds to App Store / Play Store identity. Listed for completeness — its no-real-name marketing is sometimes misread as no-KYC.
> Status: active
> Jurisdiction: United States (operator-disclosed)
> Fiat on-ramp: no
> Payment methods: card, in-app
> Founded: 2018
> Open source: no
> Custodial: yes
> Last verified: 2026-01-01

## Verdict

MySudo is a useful compartmentalization product (one app, many disposable numbers and emails) but it is not no-KYC — Apple/Google billing binds the user. Listed because it is often misread; do not assume privacy from the operator.

## Strengths

- Polished UX for managing multiple identities (numbers, emails, payment cards) from one app.

## Caveats

- Operator binds payment via Apple/Google billing; you are very much identified.
- The "Sudo" identity model is about compartmentalization within services *to other parties*, not anonymity from MySudo itself.
- Not appropriate when the threat model includes a U.S. operator with subpoena reachability.
- Facts need re-verification by operator (last seeded 2026-01).

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## What MySudo is

A multi-identity mobile app for separating phone numbers, emails, and cards across different contexts.

## Threat-model fit

Compartmentalization between *outside* parties; not anonymity from the operator.

## Sources

- [MySudo home](https://mysudo.com/) — accessed 2026-01-01
- [Anonyome Labs (operator)](https://anonyome.com/) — accessed 2026-01-01
