Mithaq

Principles

How we operate

Four principles. They govern every decision the studio makes.

They shape what we build, what we decline, the capital we accept, and the pace we keep:

Responsibility over hype

We build what is needed, not what is trending. Before a venture receives studio resources, it must pass a simple test: does this solve a real, enduring problem for the audience we serve? If the answer requires caveats or conditions, we don't build it.

The world does not need more apps. It needs fewer, better ones — built by people willing to be accountable for their existence.

Long-term benefit over quick wins

Our products are designed to be relevant in ten years. We don't optimize for launch-day metrics, funding announcements, or growth curves that impress on a slide deck. We optimize for sustained trust.

This means slower launches, longer development cycles, and less visible progress in the early months. It also means products that improve over time instead of degrading.

Trust over attention

We don't compete for attention. We earn trust through consistent product quality and transparent operations. Our users will never wonder who owns their data, what our incentives are, or whether we'll still be here next year.

The best marketing we can do is build something so reliable that people recommend it without being asked.

Ethics over convenience

When an engineering choice is easier but less ethical, we choose the harder path. When a business model is more profitable but compromises user dignity, we choose the less profitable one. When growth requires cutting corners on values, we choose slower growth.

No exceptions. No 'just this once.' No 'we'll fix it later.'

What we will never do

These commitments are permanent and non-negotiable:

  • We will never sell user data or monetize personal information.
  • We will never use attention-exploiting design patterns (dark patterns, infinite scroll, engagement manipulation).
  • We will never make product decisions driven by exit timelines or investor pressure.
  • We will never compromise on values for the sake of growth or convenience.
  • We will never build a product that we would not trust our own families to use.