in reply to Rokosun

I've read the article. A good one. But I feel like if we really want a decentralized messenger we should go directly for p2p and there are a few such alternatives. I even made an article about it a year or so ago tromjaro.com/communicate-trade… . There are ups and downs for these p2p ones tho.

I'd like a messenger that can: support group chats, sending files, video/audio calls between people or groups of people, maybe have clients for all operating systems....

From my tests qTox and Jami are the best right now. They are reliable and work great. And so easy to deal with them. Just install them and create an account locally. That's all. Even video/audio calls work + desktop sharing. They seem like a perfect alternative to say Matrix-like chats. But they fall short if you want to have multiple clients on multiple devices for the same account. Difficult to setup at times, and messages do not sync properly - you either get the messages on one or another device, but not on both from my tests....

in reply to Tio

When we last spoke about p2p apps, I told you that I'd be giving briar another try. Well, I did that a few days ago and saw some new features got added - support of sending images, profile pictures, and disappearing messages.

Note that briar is not as feature rich as jami/tox cause its mainly focused on freedom of speech. That's why briar routes traffic through Tor by default, and supports wifi/Bluetooth. Some often overlooked but important features of briar are the forum and blog support.

in reply to Tio

No, I agree with you. Briar is mainly focused on higher threat models like activities and journalists, so I don't think it'll be a good option for normal people. But I wanted to talk about it regardless, because its important that we have a more robust way to communicate in case something goes wrong. Briar would even work without an internet connection, keeping the information flowing in a crisis.

I am keeping an eye on p2p technologies, all of them. Let's see how these apps develop 😀

in reply to Rokosun

From my experience with briar and atox in the past, I've noticed that my android was killing its background connection. I couldn't fix this problem no matter what I did. I know this is a problem of android OS and the app itself is not to blame. But sadly this is not a rare situation on android - dontkillmyapp.com/

I have a device that runs lineageOS which don't seem to have this problem, but sadly most people's phones are running proprietary tradeful OSes that kills apps.

in reply to Rokosun

IMHO #briar would be a great application to have installed as a backup for exactly the reasons you discussed...principally it's ability to keep communications going during emergencies/internet outages. If deployed in small communities for example it could effectively create a meshnet in case of emergency. It's really amazing at what it does. I'd love to see a #tromlive in the future with some of these developers:)
@tio
in reply to Rokosun

You can write blogs on briar. And anyone can reblog the things you write and comment on them if they like. This would make it more that just a messenger, but a secure and censorship-free way to communicate and share around information. And here's the coolest thing - you can subscribe to a public blog outside of briar by importing its rss feed !

You can do everything on these imported RSS blogs as well - reblog them, comment on them, anything you want !

in reply to Rokosun

Sounds very cool! If I'd had time I'd write more bloc posts. I was thinking to make a tromcast and invite some dev from such chat messengers. Like from Jami, qtox, maybe matrix if they accept, and such, so we have a conversation about these like I did with the fediverse. But don't want to distract myself too much from TROM II. After I release TROM II I'll have more time to invite a lot more people to tromcast and do other things like articles and videos.
Unknown parent

friendica (DFRN) - Link to source

Tio

in reply to Tio

in reply to Tio