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2. Target Audience

·2 mins·
Sigil Gate content addresses three audience segments.

Priority 1: “Specialist” #

The core audience. Deep technical content is created specifically for them.

  • Who they are: network engineers, system administrators, DevOps specialists — those who design, build, or maintain private networks and VPN infrastructure.
  • What interests them:
    • network architecture resilient to DPI and active probing;
    • protocol and transport selection, comparison of approaches;
    • practical cases: what works, what doesn’t, and why;
    • automation, monitoring, infrastructure management tools.
  • What motivates them:
    • applying others’ experience to their own projects;
    • participating in substantive discussions with those solving similar challenges;
    • gaining expertise that is hard to find in open sources.

Priority 2: “User and Client” #

Those for whom a private network is not a matter of professional interest, but a practical necessity.

  • Who they are: individuals and organizations who need reliable access to the open internet, or consulting on building their own secure infrastructure.
  • What interests them:
    • how reliable and well-thought-out the solution is;
    • who is behind the project and what experience the team has;
    • how Sigil Gate differs from public VPN services.
  • How content works for them: technical articles and architecture deep dives are not light reading — they are proof of competence. Depth of analysis builds trust better than any advertising.

Priority 3: “Thoughtful Reader” #

The broadest segment. The Sigil Gate blog is not a narrowly specialized publication, but a space at the intersection of technology and philosophy.

  • Who they are: anyone interested in thinking about where the technological world is heading — developers, humanities scholars, people from adjacent fields.
  • What interests them:
    • how technologies are evolving — not just networking, but also AI, infrastructure, and communications;
    • philosophical questions: freedom of information, censorship, digital sovereignty, the boundaries of privacy;
    • processes occurring in society at the intersection of technology and politics.
  • What motivates them:
    • finding a platform where complex topics are discussed substantively, without oversimplification or sloganeering;
    • forming their own position based on arguments and others’ experience.