www.zeefdev.comrmhzvturoqxwxxgqudwb

Why the name ZEEF?

Sifting knowledge from noise — one curator at a time.

Every name carries a story. Ours carries a mission — to help people find what truly matters in a world that's drowning them in noise.

A Dutch word for a simple idea

ZEEF is the Dutch word for sieve — pronounced [zeːf], with a long "ee" sound (the brackets are phonetic notation, showing how native Dutch speakers say it: like the English word "safe", but starting with a "z"). A tool as old as civilization itself. Prospectors used it to separate gold from sand. Bakers use it to separate flour from clumps. Fishermen used it to separate the catch from the sea.

The internet needs one too.

Every day, more is written, recorded, generated and shared than anyone could read in a thousand lifetimes. Information is abundant. Knowledge is rare. The difference between the two is the act of sifting: holding everything up to the light and keeping only what matters.

That is what ZEEF does. That is what ZEEF means.

The prospector's metaphor

Imagine a prospector kneeling by a river, swirling a pan of gravel. Most of what passes through their hands is worthless — sand, silt, stones. But occasionally, something catches the light. A flake of gold.

That flake was always there. The river didn't make it. The algorithm didn't rank it. A person recognized it, pulled it from the noise, and held it up.

The sieve is always in human hands.

This is the part most platforms forget. A machine can sort, rank, and predict. It cannot judge. Judgment is what separates gold from sand, knowledge from noise, signal from static — and judgment belongs to people.

On ZEEF, every curator is a prospector. They know their river. They know what gold looks like. And when they find it, they put their name next to it — so you know who to trust.

Found by algorithms. Sifted by people.

A prospector kneeling by a river, sifting gold from sand with his hands.

A prospector kneeling by a river, sifting gold from sand with his hands.

Two marks, one sieve

The ZEEF icon — a blue circle containing two sets of three horizontal stripes.
The ZEEF wordmark — Z, E, E and F built from horizontal blue stripes (Z=2, E=3, E=3, F=2).

ZEEF has two marks. They can be used independently — as an icon, a favicon, or a wordmark — but together they tell a single story.

The icon is the sieve itself. The circle is a colander seen from above — and, not by accident, also the shape of a globe. The six stripes inside stand for the EE in the middle of the word ZEEF, and at the same time mimic the parallel wires of a real sieve: the kind that sits in every kitchen, sifting flour, catching clumps.

The wordmark carries the same idea forward. Each letter is built from horizontal stripes — two for the Z (top and bottom), three for each E, and two for the F. Those stripes are the links and blocks as they appear on a ZEEF page, arranged by a curator. And at the same time they are the holes of a sieve, where noise falls through and only what matters remains.

Two marks. One sieve for the world.

Save what matters

There is a second meaning hidden in the name.

To an English ear, ZEEF sounds like save — safe, secure, kept. And that is the other half of what a curator does. They don't just separate; they preserve. They rescue the best links from the churn of social feeds and the erosion of dying websites. They build something that lasts.

Sift. Save. Share. That's ZEEF.

The sieve is in your hands.

Start sifting — or start your own page.