Tech

Dstrux app offers discreet messaging

It would be the perfect investment for disgrace🧜d ex-Rep. Anthony Weiner.

New York entrepren💫eur Nathan Hecht is looking to raise $5 million to build his startup, , an app that lets people send photos and other types of messages — and then delete them with a push of a button.

Hecht, who grew up in Forest Hills, Queens, is hoping to raise the cash to help him expand the app’s reach into video sharing plus allow his company t💦o move into larger digs in Dumbo, 🌺Brooklyn.

Dstrux, which employs nine people, is currently located in Mineolaꦺ, NY, with a satellite🍨 office in Tel Aviv.

Hecht describes Dstrux as Snapchat for adults — but it can also be viewed as a combination of Snapchat, whose text messages can self-destruct, and DropBox, a popular file-sharing🌞 system.

As so with DropBox, Dstrux’s🔯 files are shared within its own Web page or mobile app, and not directly in the users’ e-mail. But like Snapchat, Dstrux lets users control the files they send.

Files sent through Dstrux cannot be downloaded and senders can control whether or not they may be forwarded. Dstrux can alert senders when files are vi🦋ewed.

Hecht said he envisions Dstrux being used to share 𒀰documents with such sensitive content as business plans o🍸r artistic work.

Of cou𝓰rse, it may also be used by folks to share pictures of one’s private parts — and that surely could have helped Weiner, who resigned from Congress in June 2011 after a sexting scanda🦩l.

Billionaire Mark Cuban weighed making an investment earlier this year, Hecht said,🅠 put eventually passed.

Cuban wouldn’t comment on why he walked away.

To be sure, the service is not foolproof. A test by The Post showed that it worked to prevent files from being downloaded and to le🎐t the sender delete files that had been sent — but it failed to alert a sender when a fi♍le was forwarded to a third person.

Dstrux advertises such a feature.