We’ve had enough of digital monopolies and surveillance capitalism. We want an alternative world that works for everyone, just like the original intention of the web and net.
We seek a world of open platforms and protocols with real choices of applications and services for people. We care about privacy, transparency and autonomy. Our tools and organisations should fundamentally be accountable and resilient.
Nice that itâs going in-browser, the installation process for the out-of-browser version is a bit of a nightmare. Â I canât imagine many Windows users getting past https://gnunet.org/content/build-instructions-microsoft-windows-platforms, Iâve never tried it though, putting myself through autoconf hell never really appeals.Will the old version go away when the RTC version is further along? Â Is the RTC version currently Chrome only?CheersRossOn 2 Jun 2014, at 14:33, Giovanni P <fiatjaf@gm ail.com> wrote:Is this old news? Isn't it time to talk about it?Even more now that it is getting a totally in-browser webRTC implementation?
Is this old news? Isn't it time to talk about it?Even more now that it is getting a totally in-browser webRTC implementation?