April 12, 2026 · Dave.
An update on nulled (Our first blog post!).
Hello there! I’m Dave, the new owner of nulled. alongside Mori. We’ve been working our asses off stabilizing the company and our infrastructure, and finally have some neat things to share, but didn’t have a great space to do so. So, welcome to the new nulled. blog!
But first: You may have noticed in the about page that ownership has changed significantly. In reality, this isn’t a major change. I have been working on nulled. since about April of 2024. I was there when we first entered BBQC, our primary datacenter, and when we racked everything in BBU, our backups location. I was there when we pulled all the old servers out of Scott Data Center in Nebraska, and they came back to Illinois in my Camaro (that was a fun road trip). I started financially contributing to nulled. near the end of 2024, and continued to expand my role after becoming nulled.’s biggest customer, funding about 1/3rd of our operating expenses. Mori has also been here quite a while, and hopped on right at the end of 2024. I took ownership of the company when Jade, the original founder of nulled. moved on to bigger and better things. Mori and I took over operations, and we’ve been constantly rebuilding nulled. with a focus on resiliency and a new vision.
A picture’s worth a thousand words, so here’s four thousand.
That's me, working on some CAT6!
This is where your backups will be stored. Neat huh?
Dave's office.
Mori's office.
What’s the plan?
The nulled. that you know is not really changing. We’re still a small infrastructure provider based out of the Midwest and we have no grand aspirations to “get rich” or turn into some VC-funded monolith. In fact, our goal is to trend in the exact opposite direction by operating nulled. as a safe home for anyone who needs compute resources but can’t due to giant providers raising prices or kicking them off for bullshit reasons. You’ve also probably seen the news: Hardware prices are through the roof due to the AI bubble, and a lot of people are getting priced out of being able to do and build things on the internet. We want to change that through creative programs like our free server initiative and providing free resources for open-source projects or users who want to do something cool but can’t afford to do so.
You have our commitment that we will never sell you any AI crap or make any portion of the business AI focused.
So, let’s get into what we’ve been up to, and what remains:
So as you can see, we’ve been real busy, but we have a long way to go here. For now it’s just us two, but I’m excited to share that we have a few other people joining us on this journey soon to help out with the to-do items and make nulled. as effective it can be at being a net good for the public. With that in mind, I want to announce nulled.’s intent to become a Public Benefit Corporation and Certified B Corp. While “selling services at-cost” doesn’t constitute a charity under tax law, both a PBC and Certified B Corp designation show a commitment to operating not for profit, but for the benefit of all. My expectation is that nulled. will always lose money, and that’s fine. Even if we break even, we’ll spend any overage on putting money back into the company, whether that be with new services, new outreach programs, or paying out the people who work with us. Should there be money left over after all that (and that’s saying something), we’ll start investing in larger ideas: Maybe some hackerspaces, maybe full time employees, and definitely more giving back to the communities we serve.
The internet and computing doesn’t have to be ruined by AI or giant businesses squeezing every dime out of its customers. It doesn’t have to be dull or fall victim to doing it the way everyone else does it (Seriously, who enjoys working with AWS?). It can be better, and we’ll work as hard as we can to see that through.