Retroshare allows you to create a network of computers (called nodes). Every user has their own node. The exact location (the IP-address) of nodes is only known to neighbour nodes, unless you create a hidden node over Tor/I2P. You invite a person to become a neighbour by exchanging your Retroshare certificates with that person.
Links between nodes are authenticated using strong asymmetric keys (PGP format) and encrypted using Perfect Forward Secrecy (OpenSSL implementation of TLS).
On top of the network mesh, Retroshare provides services to securely and anonymously exchange data with other nodes in the network beyond your own friends.
More info:
https://retroshare.cc/
https://retrosharedocs.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
RetroShare - A secure decentralized communications platform
Re: RetroShare - A secure decentralized communications platform
Retroshare is good, there is i2p community. you can run hidden node with i2p inbound and optional tor outbound.
go to retroshare.ch and get invite codes.
go to retroshare.ch and get invite codes.
Re: RetroShare - A secure decentralized communications platform
checked it out.
Probably a dead project.
No new updates since more than 2 years.
Extremely buggy & hangs [freezes] a lot.
Nothing to do as such there. completely dead communities, chats and forums.
There is commotion in developers forums/chats but still not up-to the mark.
Torrenting is present but it is same as that of public trackers.
Most FOSS projects are awesome concepts but if it not being maintained or updated at regular intervals it is clear that project is not worth following. [single update in a year is the least FOSS can do].
Probably a dead project.
No new updates since more than 2 years.
Extremely buggy & hangs [freezes] a lot.
Nothing to do as such there. completely dead communities, chats and forums.
There is commotion in developers forums/chats but still not up-to the mark.
Torrenting is present but it is same as that of public trackers.
Most FOSS projects are awesome concepts but if it not being maintained or updated at regular intervals it is clear that project is not worth following. [single update in a year is the least FOSS can do].