Temporary file sharing, so nothing lingers
A temporary share is one you do not have to remember to delete. You set a timer, the other person opens it, and when the clock runs out the file is gone from their view and from our storage.
Permanent sharing is the default everywhere, and it is the wrong default for anything sensitive. A file on chat sits in the other person's gallery and cloud backup. A link from a transfer tool often works for days. A photocopy never expires at all.
Temporary file sharing flips that. The share is built to end.
How a temporary share works on Fliko
- Pick a file: a photo, a video, a voice note, or a PDF.
- Set a self-destruct timer.
- Share a link, a QR code, or a 6-digit code.
- The recipient opens it in any browser. No app, no account.
- When the timer ends, the share stops working and the file is deleted.
The timer is the whole point, so it is the main thing you set, not a buried option.
The timer starts on first open
A common worry with expiring links is that they die before the right person gets to them. Fliko avoids that: the countdown begins the moment the recipient first opens the share, not when you hit send. So a share that sits unopened for an hour still gives them their full window once they do open it.
You stay in control until the end
You are never locked in. If you change your mind, or sent to the wrong person, you can revoke a share from your phone instantly and it stops working everywhere. A temporary share is never a permanent handover.
Temporary, and secure too
Temporary is most useful when it is paired with security. With view-only shares, the recipient sees the file in a locked viewer with no download, screenshots are blocked on Android and blanked with an alert on iOS, and the file still self-destructs on schedule. So the file is hard to copy while it is open, and gone after.
Send a temporary share now
Start from fliko.in in your browser, up to 250 MB and 10 files per share, or get the app for larger files and longer timers. If you want the mechanics of what happens at expiry, read what it really means when a shared file self-destructs.
Share a file that deletes itself.
Free, no account needed to open a share.