your point, but secure products which don't succeed at marketing are *not* "just as dangerous". Insecure but well-marketed
projects are clearly more dangerous, as people put unfounded trust in them.
My main problem with the Tox team is that they said pretty much this: they
/...\ Telegram, they're doing it all as 100% open source , and even experimenting with ways of incentivizing and crowdfunding contributions.
So when I hear
projects pit UX in tension with security, I hear that they don't feel like learning as much as Whispersystems has, or spending the time that
/...\ think the limiting factor in mass
> > adoption is involvement of more design and user experience people in
> > decentralization
projects.
> > >
> > > As I describe in the Gigaom article today, I also think designers are
> > quite interested in this (post Snowden
Goffi [LibreList] Hello + Salut à Toi / Libervia 2015-08-22 18:15:14 were advised at FrOSCon to subscribe to this list and talk about our
project, so here I am :)
We work on a decentralized "social network" based on XMPP (XMPP is not
only about instant messaging contrary to a popular belief).
The good point about this is that
/...\ standard and so compatible with
other
projects (the 2 only other XMPP
projects able to manage blogging -
to my knowledge - are Movim and Jappix). Our
project do instant
messaging, (micro)blogging, file sharing, games, end 2 end encryption
(only OTR for instant messaging so far), and is multi-interfaces
/...\ desktop, command line, console). We have many planed
projects like a
micro-computer pre-installed (based on a Olinuxino Lime2), a Tor
version, and integration in other software.
The
project is already available in Debian, Arch Linux and some other
distros, but the versions there start
BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA256
What's the
project?
Briar is a messaging app designed for activists, journalists, and
anyone else who needs a safe, easy and robust way to communicate.
Unlike traditional messaging tools such as email or Twitter, Briar
doesn't rely on a central server - messages
/...\ Briar's data synchronization capabilities to support
secure, distributed applications including blogging, crisis mapping
and collaborative document editing.
What are you excited about?
The
project is one of 54 semi-finalists in the Knight News Challenge.
https://www.newschallenge.org/challenge/2014/feedback-review/secure-messaging-anywhere
Cheers,
Michael
On 25/04/14 16:51, Paul Frazee wrote:
> Glad
/...\ thought it'd be fun to hear status updates on people's
>>
projects.
> That'll give everyone a chance to hear again about
projects they
> might not know about or had lost track of.
>>
>> Just a quick breakdown: what's the
project
alternatives perform in real use-cases. I think it'll be difficult to make feature parity with HTTP from greenfield
projects, which is why I'm skeptical. For instance, GNUnet's protocol is restricted to file-sharing, while HTTP can do file sharing, social networking, video-streaming, etc with dynamic
/...\ SIGNED MESSAGE-----
> > Hash: SHA1
> >
> > Wow, that's a pretty hardcore diagram!
> >
> > Any key
projects on it that are missing from this list?
> > https://github.com/redecentralize/alternative-internet
> >
> > Francis
/...\ mentioned here, so I thought I would share it:
> > >
> > > http://youbroketheinternet.org/
> > >
> > > encourages
projects to make a new internet stack from low level
> > infrastructure all the way up to
> > > end user applications
Bastien Guerry [LibreList] Hackadons 2015-10-17 15:09:56 Hackadons" are events sponsored by companies or initiatives where
we give the money to participants so that they can give it back to
projects contributing to the commons.
Here is the manifesto :
We fight for a (re)decentralized Internet.
Redecentralizing Internet is a manyfold challenge: it is a technical
/...\ legal and political one. But it is also a financial challenge.
To many free softwares and common goods
projects are not financially
supported. To many of these
projects rely on the good will and the
free time of a fistul of people.
Hackadons' goal is to foster fix this,
project /...\ project.
I hope the "financial" dimension will be part of your discussions,
and I'm sorry again I could not make it!
Cheers,
--
Bastien
Kiktron RAKO [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] 2014-06-06 16:04:20 have 2 webs annoncube.com for the fund, once till the KS is in the approval process and another once is approved that link the
project to other software
projects.
The reason is a polciy from KS that say we can not use the funds for any software that
/...\ another critical systems of our body...... Leucemia?....
2014-05-28 0:20 GMT+02:00 Benjamin ANDRE < ben@cozycloud.cc > :
hello Kicktron, our both
projects seem quite complementary. Your are focused on the "low services" : hardware, network, Adblockers, Mesh wifi router, Email encryption device, NAS,
Annonimization box, Tunnel servers, Selfhosting
/...\ Orange, La Poste) and we have just finished our fund raising. => if it make sense for you do discuss about our two
projects, do not hesitate to contact me.
Cheers, Benjamin ANDRE - +33 (0)6 86 25 36 66 - Cozy.io
2014-05-27 23:24 GMT+02:00 Kiktron
Richard D. Bartlett [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Spring of User Experience 2014-02-28 09:34:23 domain of some specialist.Â
I can imagine a great article exploring the tension between design and democracy, exploring how open-source
projects can adapt the 'visionary designer' model (e.g. Apple) to decentralised
projects.
Feel free to contact me off-list if you're interested :) Warm regards from Aotearoa
/...\ Having interviewed many geeks, I now think the limiting factor in mass adoption is involvement of more design and user experience people in decentralization
projects.
As I describe in the Gigaom article today, I also think designers are quite interested in this (post Snowden), and likely there are some
/...\ need good
projects to help/start but don't know about this movement.
We are going to try and interview more people with that kind of background, who have done at least something tangible in this area.
Ideas I have:
Telegram - who does design stuff there?
Brennan from Mailpile - would
Thanks
--- Original Message ---
From: "Eric Mill" <eric@konklone.com>
Sent: 3 January 2014 02:59
To: redecentralize@librelist.com
Subject: Re: [redecentralize] Intros and current
projects
Yeah, it was only pretty recently that Docker announced they can
now run on any Linux distribution .
I will say that the learning curve on creating
/...\ Webfinger, and did
>> Sinatra and Jekyll libraries for participating.
>>
>> I don't have a big relevant
project going on right now, but I
>> have a small one, and I could use this list's input about it.
>>
>> Basically
/...\ call so
>>> we all can get to know each other.
>>>
>>> I'm involved with redecentralize
projects due to the privacy
>>> issue and out of an interest in simpler, user-modifiable
>>> software, which web systems tend
knowledge-centric organizations and offers
most (80%+) of the features all organizations need, such as: Email,
Website & Blog, Shopping Cart, Intranet &
Project Management,
E-learning, Social Networking, Knowledge base, File sharing, Issue
Tracker, Video-conferencing, LDAP, VPN, Gateway, Network, etc. You can
install anywhere (home, office, laptop, data
/...\ premise or on rented
servers. It can be customized to your needs and we urge you to
contribute to this community-driven and innovative
project.
This
project was born out of Tiki Wiki CMS Groupware. Tiki is 11 years old and:
* http://tiki.org/FLOSS+Web+Application+with+the+most+built-in+features
* http://tiki.org/FLOSS+Web+Application+with+the+fastest+release+cycle
* http://info.tiki.org/article188-Tiki-reaches-500-contributors-with-commit-access
/...\ info.tiki.org/article192-Tiki-Passes-1-Million-Downloads
Tiki's success is due to a lot of hard work of course, but also to its
unique development model. All
projects are unique, but the "Tiki
model" is more unique than most :-) Now, the Tiki Model has been
extended to a software suite: https://tiki.org
Geoffroy Couprie [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Spring of User Experience 2014-02-28 19:33:08 developer should not have to worry about repeating IVs or verifying a MAC). I see that approach in NaCl or the new Python cryptography
project. It takes time to write those abstractions, but it is rewarding.
Also, we need clear definitions of what a protocol can and cannot do. there
/...\ Having interviewed many geeks, I now think the limiting factor in mass adoption is involvement of more design and user experience people in decentralization
projects.
As I describe in the Gigaom article today, I also think designers are quite interested in this (post Snowden), and likely there are some
/...\ need good
projects to help/start but don't know about this movement.
We are going to try and interview more people with that kind of background, who have done at least something tangible in this area. Ideas I have:
Telegram - who does design stuff there?
Brennan from Mailpile - would
Francis Irving < francis@flourish.org > wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1
Wow, that's a pretty hardcore diagram!
Any key
projects on it that are missing from this list?
https://github.com/redecentralize/alternative-internet
Francis
On Sun, Dec 29, 2013 at 06:08:24PM +0000, Benjamin Heitmann wrote:
> Hello there
/...\ relevant,
> however I did not see it mentioned here, so I thought I would share it:
>
> http://youbroketheinternet.org/
>
> encourages
projects to make a new internet stack from low level infrastructure all the way up to
> end user applications.
>
> I wanted to attached
/...\ picture which assigns various
projects to different levels of the stack,
> but the picture is too big.. ;)
>
> All in all a very interesting umbrella
project.
>
> cheers, Benjamin.
>
>
> --
> Benjamin Heitmann, BSc, MSc
> PhD Researcher
> Unit for Information Mining
security / privacy tools happening this weekend in San Francisco: https://openitp.org/openitp/ux-sprint-for-security-privacy-tools.html
I can't make it, but there may be interesting people /
projects to talk to coming out of it -jonny
On Thu, Feb 27, 2014 at 12:20 PM, Francis Irving < francis@flourish.org > wrote:
Hi all!
Having
/...\ interviewed many geeks, I now think the limiting factor in mass adoption is involvement of more design and user experience people in decentralization
projects.
As I describe in the Gigaom article today, I also think designers are quite interested in this (post Snowden), and likely there are some who need
/...\ good
projects to help/start but don't know about this movement.
We are going to try and interview more people with that kind of background, who have done at least something tangible in this area.
Ideas I have:
Telegram - who does design stuff there?
Brennan from Mailpile - would
Having interviewed many geeks, I now think the limiting factor in mass adoption is involvement of more design and user experience people in decentralization
projects.
>
> As I describe in the Gigaom article today, I also think designers are quite interested in this (post Snowden), and likely there
/...\ some who need good
projects to help/start but don't know about this movement.
>
> We are going to try and interview more people with that kind of background, who have done at least something tangible in this area.
>
> Ideas I have:
> Telegram - who does design
/...\ attention.
They are a marketing machine with no security credentials whatsoever.
They are so far up their own ass they are like a 3D
projection of a klein bottle.
They ate a crap load of humble cake, perhaps it will be worth talking to them in a year
Having interviewed many geeks, I now think the limiting factor in mass adoption is involvement of more design and user experience people in decentralization
projects.
>
> As I describe in the Gigaom article today, I also think designers are quite interested in this (post Snowden), and likely there
/...\ some who need good
projects to help/start but don't know about this movement.
>
> We are going to try and interview more people with that kind of background, who have done at least something tangible in this area.
>
> Ideas I have:
> Telegram - who does design
/...\ attention.
They are a marketing machine with no security credentials whatsoever.
They are so far up their own ass they are like a 3D
projection of a klein bottle.
They ate a crap load of humble cake, perhaps it will be worth talking to them in a year
Francis Irving [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Spring of User Experience 2014-02-28 15:20:26 think the limiting factor in mass
> > adoption is involvement of more design and user experience people in
> > decentralization
projects.
> > >
> > > As I describe in the Gigaom article today, I also think designers are
> > quite interested in this (post Snowden
/...\ likely there are some who need
> > good
projects to help/start but don't know about this movement.
> > >
> > > We are going to try and interview more people with that kind of
> > background, who have done at least something tangible in this
/...\ marketing machine with no security credentials whatsoever.
> >
> > They are so far up their own ass they are like a 3D
projection of a klein
> > bottle.
> >
> > They ate a crap load of humble cake, perhaps it will be worth talking
Having interviewed many geeks, I now think the limiting factor in mass adoption is involvement of more design and user experience people in decentralization
projects.
> Â Â Â Â >
> Â Â Â Â > As I describe
/...\ Gigaom article today, I also think designers are quite interested in this (post Snowden), and likely there are some who need good
projects to help/start but don't know about this movement
/...\ whatsoever.
>
> Â Â Â Â They are so far up their own ass they are like a 3D
projection of a klein bottle.
>
> Â Â Â Â They ate a crap load of humble cake, perhaps it will
think there’s anything wrong with plugging a project. Part of what this group is about is discussing various work going on in this area. I’ve been following Ethereum for a long time, and I’m really fascinated
that chapter although I've seen evidence the Chennai chapter has
been active as we've had some links and policy
project with them fairly
recently.
Christian
Anish Mangal wrote:
> Hi Christian,
>
> I'm in India - currently Delhi, but hover about a lot in the mountains
/...\ providing internet access to people/places which didn't have it
> before.
> >
> > Volunteering for the SchoolServer/XSCE[1]
project, I largely work with
> > communities which are rural, often remote, and largely disconnected to
> > the internet. At these places, access to CC-licensed
/...\ years ago, but is perhaps why I'm
> subscribed to
> > this list right now :-)
> >
> > Through the XSCE
project we have control over the kind of (offline)
> > services we provide and internet websites we allow access to. Still, I
> > would
SIGNED MESSAGE-----
> > Hash: SHA1
> >
> > Wow, that's a pretty hardcore diagram!
> >
> > Any key
projects on it that are missing from this list?
> > https://github.com/redecentralize/alternative-internet
> >
> > Francis
/...\ mentioned here, so I thought I would share it:
> > >
> > > http://youbroketheinternet.org/
> > >
> > > encourages
projects to make a new internet stack from low level
> > infrastructure all the way up to
> > > end user applications
/...\ wanted to attached is a picture which assigns various
projects to
> > different levels of the stack,
> > > but the picture is too big.. ;)
> > >
> > > All in all a very interesting umbrella
project.
> > >
> > > cheers, Benjamin
work even if we are a team of 6 people, so any feedback to help us choose our priorities !
good luck with your
project ! Benjamin ANDRE - +33 (0)6 86 25 36 66 - Cozy.io
2014/1/3 Eric Mill < eric@konklone.com >
Yeah, it was only pretty recently that Docker announced they
/...\ Webfinger, and did
>> Sinatra and Jekyll libraries for participating.
>>
>> I don't have a big relevant
project going on right now, but I
>> have a small one, and I could use this list's input about it.
>>
>> Basically
/...\ call so
>>> we all can get to know each other.
>>>
>>> I'm involved with redecentralize
projects due to the privacy
>>> issue and out of an interest in simpler, user-modifiable
>>> software, which web systems tend
Black), new Installer/client for connected
machines, value-added services and much much more.
Excited about: hiring two new contributors to be directors on the
project, reincorporating as a non-profit, and working on new ideas to
create a truly innovative self-hosting experience that will blow
everyone's socks
/...\ Paul Frazee wrote:
> Hey all,
>
> I thought it'd be fun to hear status updates on people's
projects.
> That'll give everyone a chance to hear again about
projects they might
> not know about or had lost track of.
>
> Just a quick
/...\ breakdown: what's the
project, what's the latest milestone,
> what's in development now, and what are you excited about?
>
> Paul
BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1
Wow, that's a pretty hardcore diagram!
Any key
projects on it that are missing from this list?
https://github.com/redecentralize/alternative-internet
Francis
On Sun, Dec 29, 2013 at 06:08:24PM +0000, Benjamin Heitmann wrote:
> Hello there,
>
> I found this
/...\ relevant,
> however I did not see it mentioned here, so I thought I would share it:
>
> http://youbroketheinternet.org/
>
> encourages
projects to make a new internet stack from low level infrastructure all the way up to
> end user applications.
>
> I wanted to attached
/...\ picture which assigns various
projects to different levels of the stack,
> but the picture is too big.. ;)
>
> All in all a very interesting umbrella
project.
>
> cheers, Benjamin.
>
>
> --
> Benjamin Heitmann, BSc, MSc
> PhD Researcher
> Unit for Information Mining
search
engine, but due to lack of time it just remained a 'future work' idea in
a chapter of my degree's final year
project report.
If you have time to waste: http://ktorn.com/prog/iseeker/summary.html
Since then a few implementations of p2p SEs appeared, most notably YaCy:
http://yacy.net/en/
/...\ were more relevant, but because it was so much faster.
Filipe Farinha
On 18/10/2015 14:47, Francis Irving wrote:
> "a very large
project, requiring the cooperation of at least 5 servers"
> is a great change!
>
> These days we often have 5 servers (small, virtual
/...\ almost
> whimsically just on one small
project...
>
> On Sun, 18 Oct 2015, at 06:56 AM, Hugh Barnard wrote:
>> Hi folks
>> This: https://twitter.com/alicemazzy/status/655306196128280576 is what
>> a web search engine hardware configuration looked like in 1996. That
Benjamin Heitmann [LibreList] GNU Internet Stack / youbroketheinternet.org 2013-12-29 18:08:24
example, I'm a big fan of Webfinger , and did Sinatra and Jekyll libraries for participating.
I don't have a big relevant
project going on right now, but I have a small one, and I could use this list's input about it. Basically, I am interested in making
/...\ just wanted to say hi and encourage a roll call so we all can get to know each other. I'm involved with redecentralize
projects due to the privacy issue and out of an interest in simpler, user-modifiable software, which web systems tend to restrict. I work solo
/...\ Austin on a
project called Grimwire that's in this realm. I'm also involved in the distributed systems community here, though mostly as an enthusiast (I'm not implementing paxos or anything).
Nice meeting you all, and I look forward to seeing where this community goes. Paul F
-- konklone.com
30C3 coverage, its very relevant,
however I did not see it mentioned here, so I thought I would share it:
http://youbroketheinternet.org/
encourages
projects to make a new internet stack from low level infrastructure all the way up to
end user applications.
I wanted to attached is a picture which
/...\ assigns various
projects to different levels of the stack,
but the picture is too big.. ;)
All in all a very interesting umbrella
project.
cheers, Benjamin.
--
Benjamin Heitmann, BSc, MSc
PhD Researcher
Unit for Information Mining and Retrieval (UIMR)
Digital Enterprise Research Institute (DERI)
NUI Galway, Ireland
publications and slides
maze@strahlungsfrei.de [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Intros and current projects 2014-01-02 23:56:09 Webfinger, and did Sinatra
> and Jekyll libraries for participating.
>
> I don't have a big relevant
project going on right now, but I have a
> small one, and I could use this list's input about it.
>
> Basically, I am interested in making
/...\ encourage a roll call so we all
>> can get to know each other.
>>
>> I'm involved with redecentralize
projects due to the privacy issue
>> and out of an interest in simpler, user-modifiable software, which
>> web systems tend to restrict
/...\ work solo in Austin on a
project
>> called Grimwire that's in this realm. I'm also involved in the
>> distributed systems community here, though mostly as an enthusiast
>> (I'm not implementing paxos or anything).
>>
>> Nice meeting
Francis Irving [LibreList] Spring of User Experience 2014-02-27 20:20:26 Having interviewed many geeks, I now think the limiting factor in mass adoption is involvement of more design and user experience people in decentralization
projects.
As I describe in the Gigaom article today, I also think designers are quite interested in this (post Snowden), and likely there are some
/...\ need good
projects to help/start but don't know about this movement.
We are going to try and interview more people with that kind of background, who have done at least something tangible in this area.
Ideas I have:
Telegram - who does design stuff there?
Brennan from Mailpile - would
/...\ good or weird for us to have a second interview of the same
project, but on a different aspect?
IndiePhone
Any other suggestions?
Francis
PS Unhosted interview to come out soon
Webfinger, and did
>> Sinatra and Jekyll libraries for participating.
>>
>> I don't have a big relevant
project going on right now, but I
>> have a small one, and I could use this list's input about it.
>>
>> Basically
/...\ call so
>>> we all can get to know each other.
>>>
>>> I'm involved with redecentralize
projects due to the privacy
>>> issue and out of an interest in simpler, user-modifiable
>>> software, which web systems tend
/...\ restrict. I work solo in
>>> Austin on a
project called Grimwire that's in this realm. I'm
>>> also involved in the distributed systems community here, though
>>> mostly as an enthusiast (I'm not implementing paxos or
>>> anything
central chain is interesting, and I guess mirrors the structure of the Internet, I just don't know of any other blockchain
projects dealing with that idea. Pretty cool.
On Thu, Jan 2, 2014 at 12:02 PM, Eric Mill < eric@konklone.com > wrote:
Oh, these are cool, thank
/...\ write about the subject, and round up what I can.
So for example, I'm aware of Namecoin , and the OkTurtles
project, which is trying to put Namecoin into practical application in a user-friendly way. I've also been sent this
project by Agora Voting
with or are involved in
> providing internet access to people/places which didn't have it before.
>
> Volunteering for the SchoolServer/XSCE[1]
project, I largely work with
> communities which are rural, often remote, and largely disconnected to
> the internet. At these places, access to CC-licensed
/...\ years ago, but is perhaps why I'm subscribed to
> this list right now :-)
>
> Through the XSCE
project we have control over the kind of (offline)
> services we provide and internet websites we allow access to. Still, I
> would love to have a discussion
/...\ structure from Explore -> Build -> Connect. I don't think that is correct.
>
> Regardless of my actions or whatever the XSCE
project does, more people
> are going to go online through Facebook's internet.org
> < http://internet.org >, or google balloons etc.. So this
others.
>
Well, it's non-modifiable and non-distributable, so it's proprietary, by
definition. There are quite a number of free software
projects that
don't allow any modification that they don't like. But they still allow
people to propose such modifications, and fork the
project /...\ they like.
The Linux kernel is such a
project.
The "current P2P diaspora" depends on free software, because without
access to the source code, you can't ensure that the software actually
does what it claims to do. It's really not about property.
> I pay them
clever and I especially
love the concept from a technical standpoint.
Best regards,
Shannon
On 09/08/2016 11:17 PM, Anish Mangal
wrote:
Dear Shannon,
"
project" is somewhat ambiguous from where I
stand.
In the context of *this* deloyment in Leh, it was
funded by the two of us (Mikko
/...\ network
there. Me and a colleague are brainstorming ways right
now to make this sustainable and scalable.
In the context of the open source
project (which is XSCE
- School Server Community Edition) , it is a loose group
of volunteers collaborating remotely, but working
locally with a common technology base. There
/...\ shannonc...@riseup.net >
wrote:
I hate to say I think we should consider moving away
from the NGO model. Who is funding this
project?
Best regards,
Shannon
Paul Frazee < pfrazee@gmail.com > wrote:
> Hey all,
>
> I thought it'd be fun to hear status updates on people's
projects. That'll give everyone a chance to hear again about
projects they might not know about or had lost track of.
>
> Just
/...\ quick breakdown: what's the
project, what's the latest milestone, what's in development now, and what are you excited about?
>
> Paul
Benjamin ANDRE [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] 2014-05-28 00:20:46 hello Kicktron, our both
projects seem quite complementary. Your are focused on the "low services" : hardware, network, Adblockers, Mesh wifi router, Email encryption device, NAS,
Annonimization box, Tunnel servers, Selfhosting boxes, PayTV, Darknet
addons, etc Cozy Cloud is focused on higher layers, we work at : deploying easily web apps
/...\ Orange, La Poste) and we have just finished our fund raising. => if it make sense for you do discuss about our two
projects, do not hesitate to contact me.
Cheers, Benjamin ANDRE - +33 (0)6 86 25 36 66 - Cozy.io
2014-05-27 23:24 GMT+02:00 Kiktron
/...\ they make sense. There are a lot of other useful tools that we may use, like ArkOS on the raspberry's the Serval
project for free messages and call's inside a city by using a hybrid "android access point". And many, many more that are here on your site
thought it'd be fun to hear status updates on people's projects. That'll give everyone a chance to hear again about projects they might not know about or had lost track of.
Just a quick breakdown: what's the project, what's the latest milestone, what
Paul Frazee <pfrazee@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hey all,
>
> I thought it'd be fun to hear status updates on people's
projects. That'll give everyone a chance to hear again about
projects they might not know about or had lost track of.
>
> Just
/...\ quick breakdown: what's the
project, what's the latest milestone, what's in development now, and what are you excited about?
>
> Paul
folks who work with or are involved in providing internet access to people/places which didn't have it before. Volunteering for the SchoolServer/XSCE[1]
project, I largely work with communities which are rural, often remote, and largely disconnected to the internet. At these places, access to CC-licensed or public
/...\ have sounded crazy to me 3-4 years ago, but is perhaps why I'm subscribed to this list right now :-) Through the XSCE
project we have control over the kind of (offline) services we provide and internet websites we allow access to. Still, I would love to have
/...\ logical progression structure from Explore -> Build -> Connect. I don't think that is correct. Regardless of my actions or whatever the XSCE
project does, more people are going to go online through Facebook's internet.org , or google balloons etc.. So this is a fight worth fighting
feross [GG] Re: A distributed CDN 2017-03-08 21:37:00 Torbjorn â c ool
project. The hardest part of any initiative like this is to get user adoption. Why will the average content producer put their video on your site vs. YouTube which is easier and has all the viewers and name recognition? That's the hardest part
/...\ project like this. It's not all about the tech â in fact, if WebTorrent is working correctly, the user won't even be able to tell that the video is P2P vs. HTTP. What actually matters much more is: 1) the quality of the product
/...\ this tattooed on their knuckles so they remember to not spend all their time on coding :) Anish â the underlying WebTorrent
project is open source. See here: https://github.com/feross/webtorrent Cheers, Feross Blog | WebTorrent  |  Study Notes
Having interviewed many geeks, I now think the limiting factor in mass adoption is involvement of more design and user experience people in decentralization
projects.
As I describe in the Gigaom article today, I also think designers are quite interested in this (post Snowden), and likely there are some
/...\ need good
projects to help/start but don't know about this movement.
We are going to try and interview more people with that kind of background, who have done at least something tangible in this area. Ideas I have:
Telegram - who does design stuff there?
Brennan from Mailpile - would
/...\ good or weird for us to have a second interview of the same
project, but on a different aspect?
IndiePhone Any other suggestions? Francis PS Unhosted interview to come out soon!
-- konklone.com | @konklone
Adam Ierymenko [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Spring of User Experience 2014-02-28 10:00:04 Having interviewed many geeks, I now think the limiting factor in mass adoption is involvement of more design and user experience people in decentralization
projects. As I describe in the Gigaom article today, I also think designers are quite interested in this (post Snowden), and likely there are some
/...\ need good
projects to help/start but don't know about this movement. We are going to try and interview more people with that kind of background, who have done at least something tangible in this area. Ideas I have:
Telegram - who does design stuff there?
Brennan from Mailpile - would
/...\ good or weird for us to have a second interview of the same
project, but on a different aspect?
IndiePhone Any other suggestions? Francis PS Unhosted interview to come out soon
Webfinger, and did
>> Sinatra and Jekyll libraries for participating.
>>
>> I don't have a big relevant
project going on right now, but I
>> have a small one, and I could use this list's input about it.
>>
>> Basically
/...\ call so
>>> we all can get to know each other.
>>>
>>> I'm involved with redecentralize
projects due to the privacy
>>> issue and out of an interest in simpler, user-modifiable
>>> software, which web systems tend
/...\ restrict. I work solo in
>>> Austin on a
project called Grimwire that's in this realm. I'm
>>> also involved in the distributed systems community here, though
>>> mostly as an enthusiast (I'm not implementing paxos or
>>> anything
with or are involved in
> providing internet access to people/places which didn't have it before.
>
> Volunteering for the SchoolServer/XSCE[1]
project, I largely work with
> communities which are rural, often remote, and largely disconnected to
> the internet. At these places, access to CC-licensed
/...\ years ago, but is perhaps why I'm subscribed to
> this list right now :-)
>
> Through the XSCE
project we have control over the kind of (offline)
> services we provide and internet websites we allow access to. Still, I
> would love to have a discussion
/...\ structure from Explore -> Build -> Connect. I don't think that is correct.
>
> Regardless of my actions or whatever the XSCE
project does, more people
> are going to go online through Facebook's internet.org
> <http://internet.org>, or google balloons etc.. So this
others.
>
Well, it's non-modifiable and non-distributable, so it's proprietary, by
definition. There are quite a number of free software
projects that don't
allow any modification that they don't like. But they still allow people to
propose such modifications, and fork the
project /...\ they like.
The Linux kernel is such a
project.
The "current P2P diaspora" depends on free software, because without access
to the source code, you can't ensure that the software actually does what it
claims to do. It's really not about property.
> I pay them
Joerg.Wittenberger@softeyes.net > wrote:
Am 10.03.2014 17:51, schrieb Paul
Frazee:
Reading your response and reading Askemos' docs,
I'm inclined to say our
projects solve fairly different
problems. Let me step through the Mint.com example to hopefully
clarify the differences.
Reading your message I'd agree. Looks like
/...\ projects solve kinda
complementary problems, which makes us deal with similar issues.Â
Just you're concerned with them at the client/browser side of the
game, while we were looking at the service side (avoiding to say
"server" here since it's yet another client/peer).
Mint's application
here: http://piratepad.nl/rdc  Next steps are to finalise what it is and logistics. My aim is to explore
projects that are or can become big enough to change the status quo. Figure out what it will take to get decentralized apps mainstream. Have
/...\ will be a place to bring interested people together, showcase whatâs
>> been happening with various
projects, discover new ones and understand the
>> evolving conversation about the possibilities and concerns of
>> decentralization.
>>
>> My hope
Janislav Malahov [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Redecentralize Conference! 2015-08-08 11:23:03 here: http://piratepad.nl/rdc  Next steps are to finalise what it is and logistics. My aim is to explore
projects that are or can become big enough to change the status quo. Figure out what it will take to get decentralized apps mainstream. Have
/...\ will be a place to bring interested people together, showcase whatâs
>> been happening with various
projects, discover new ones and understand the
>> evolving conversation about the possibilities and concerns of
>> decentralization.
>>
>> My hope
Feross Aboukhadijeh [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Hello from WebTorrent 2013-12-08 15:46:06 slide about Redecentralize in my talk about WebRTC Data Black Magic  at RealtimeConf!
I wanted to share a bit about my new
project, WebTorrent . I'm building a browser BitTorrent client that requires no install (no plugin/extension/etc.) and fully-interoperates with the regular BitTorrent network
/...\ participate.
I think this is one of the most exciting uses of WebRTC to date, and I hope you'll check out the
project at http://webtorrent.io . Nothing works yet and there's still a lot of code to be written, but I'm pretty sure the concept is sound
here: http://piratepad.nl/rdc  Next steps are to finalise what it is and logistics. My aim is to explore
projects that are or can become big enough to change the status quo. Figure out what it will take to get decentralized apps mainstream. Have
/...\ will be a place to bring interested people together, showcase whatâs
>> been happening with various
projects, discover new ones and understand the
>> evolving conversation about the possibilities and concerns of
>> decentralization.
>>
>> My hope
Jos Poortvliet [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Redecentralize Conference! 2015-08-09 11:33:06
write
> about the subject, and round up what I can.
>
> So for example, I'm aware of Namecoin, and the OkTurtles project,
> which is trying to put Namecoin into practical application in a
> user-friendly way. I've also been sent this project by Agora
everything’s become so centralized. I think economics is only part of the story. As far as funding goes, three of the
projects you list are funded to some level by angel or venture capital: BitTorrent, ZeroTier, and Sandstorm. I think OwnCloud, which you didn’t mention
/...\ need toll booths everywhere, but we need them somewhere. There must be some mechanism for open and free “as in freedom”
projects to finance themselves. Otherwise they’re at a permanent disadvantage. Free “as in beer” also encourages the development of dishonest pseudo-free business
Martin Honermeyer < maze@strahlungsfrei.de > wrote:
Some of you might already have heard of it. There is a new
project
called Avatar [1] built by two finnish guys. It aims to create a
distributed and secure P2P network which allows for messaging and data
storage, among others. In order
/...\ implemented via JavaScript in the web
browser. Looking the technology preview description [1], this seems the
be one the most ambitious and thought-out
projects I have seen so far.
For the peer-to-peer connections, they are currently using an
(optional) locally-installed software called "Avatar Bridge" which
encourage a roll call so we
> all can get to know each other.
>
> I'm involved with redecentralize
projects due to the privacy issue
> and out of an interest in simpler, user-modifiable software, which
> web systems tend to restrict. I work solo in Austin
/...\ project
> called Grimwire that's in this realm. I'm also involved in the
> distributed systems community here, though mostly as an enthusiast
> (I'm not implementing paxos or anything).
>
> Nice meeting you all, and I look forward to seeing where this
> community goes
Francis Irving [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Hello from WebTorrent 2013-12-30 12:09:19 about WebRTC Data Black
> Magic<http://vimeo.com/77265280> at
> RealtimeConf!
>
> I wanted to share a bit about my new
project, WebTorrent<http://webtorrent.io>
> .
>
> I'm building a browser BitTorrent client that requires no install (no
> plugin/extension/etc.) and fully-interoperates
/...\ think this is one of the most exciting uses of WebRTC to date, and I hope
> you'll check out the
project at http://webtorrent.io. Nothing works yet and
> there's still a lot of code to be written, but I'm pretty sure the concept
write about the subject, and round up what I can.
So for example, I'm aware of Namecoin , and the OkTurtles project, which is trying to put Namecoin into practical application in a user-friendly way. I've also been sent this project by Agora Voting
encourage a roll call so we
> all can get to know each other.
>
> I'm involved with redecentralize
projects due to the privacy issue
> and out of an interest in simpler, user-modifiable software, which
> web systems tend to restrict. I work solo in Austin
/...\ project
> called Grimwire that's in this realm. I'm also involved in the
> distributed systems community here, though mostly as an enthusiast
> (I'm not implementing paxos or anything).
>
> Nice meeting you all, and I look forward to seeing where this
> community goes
Feross Aboukhadijeh [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Hello from WebTorrent 2013-12-31 17:54:38 WebRTC Data Black
> Magic< http://vimeo.com/77265280 > at
> RealtimeConf!
>
> I wanted to share a bit about my new
project, WebTorrent< http://webtorrent.io >
> .
>
> I'm building a browser BitTorrent client that requires no install (no
> plugin/extension/etc.) and fully-interoperates
/...\ think this is one of the most exciting uses of WebRTC to date, and I hope
> you'll check out the
project at http://webtorrent.io . Nothing works yet and
> there's still a lot of code to be written, but I'm pretty sure the concept
like to write about the subject, and round up what I can. So for example, I'm aware of Namecoin , and the OkTurtles project, which is trying to put Namecoin into practical application in a user-friendly way. I've also been sent this project by Agora Voting
Ira [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Hello! 2015-09-07 08:47:29 short introduction :)
I am a free-software and open-education volunteer mainly working on
the XSCE (short for School Server Community Edition) project. I've
volunteered for the OLPC project from 2010-2014 and worked in the
field in Paraguay and Uruguay, and helped develop the Australian
version
Paul Frazee [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Introduction 2014-01-06 13:18:13 decentralized network there would be no "killer apps" for it. It wouldn't go anywhere.
This is why one of my goals with this
project is to make p2p lateral communication easy on public virtual LANs. The fact that peers use a set of centralized servers to find each other
/...\ Paul Frazee < pfrazee@gmail.com > wrote: Hey Adam,
ZeroTier has been high on my watch-list. Very interesting
project. I'm guessing because of the subscription model that it has some central coordinator?
What I imagine doing with ZeroTier is running private web services and distributing the names (" http://couchdb.paul
Adam Ierymenko [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Introduction 2014-01-06 10:51:29 decentralized network there would be no "killer apps" for it. It wouldn't go anywhere. This is why one of my goals with this
project is to make p2p lateral communication easy on public virtual LANs. The fact that peers use a set of centralized servers to find each other
/...\ Paul Frazee < pfrazee@gmail.com > wrote: Hey Adam, ZeroTier has been high on my watch-list. Very interesting
project. I'm guessing because of the subscription model that it has some central coordinator?
What I imagine doing with ZeroTier is running private web services and distributing the names (" http://couchdb.paul
Adam Ierymenko [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Introduction 2014-01-06 11:40:41 decentralized network there would be no "killer apps" for it. It wouldn't go anywhere.
This is why one of my goals with this
project is to make p2p lateral communication easy on public virtual LANs. The fact that peers use a set of centralized servers to find each other
/...\ Paul Frazee < pfrazee@gmail.com > wrote: Hey Adam,
ZeroTier has been high on my watch-list. Very interesting
project. I'm guessing because of the subscription model that it has some central coordinator?
What I imagine doing with ZeroTier is running private web services and distributing the names (" http://couchdb.paul
Paul Frazee [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Introduction 2014-01-06 13:46:47 decentralized network there would be no "killer apps" for it. It wouldn't go anywhere.
This is why one of my goals with this
project is to make p2p lateral communication easy on public virtual LANs. The fact that peers use a set of centralized servers to find each other
/...\ Paul Frazee < pfrazee@gmail.com > wrote: Hey Adam,
ZeroTier has been high on my watch-list. Very interesting
project. I'm guessing because of the subscription model that it has some central coordinator?
What I imagine doing with ZeroTier is running private web services and distributing the names (" http://couchdb.paul
Adam Ierymenko [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Introduction 2014-01-06 11:50:49 decentralized network there would be no "killer apps" for it. It wouldn't go anywhere.
This is why one of my goals with this
project is to make p2p lateral communication easy on public virtual LANs. The fact that peers use a set of centralized servers to find each other
/...\ Paul Frazee < pfrazee@gmail.com > wrote: Hey Adam,
ZeroTier has been high on my watch-list. Very interesting
project. I'm guessing because of the subscription model that it has some central coordinator?
What I imagine doing with ZeroTier is running private web services and distributing the names (" http://couchdb.paul
Paul Frazee [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Introduction 2014-01-06 13:53:30 decentralized network there would be no "killer apps" for it. It wouldn't go anywhere.
This is why one of my goals with this
project is to make p2p lateral communication easy on public virtual LANs. The fact that peers use a set of centralized servers to find each other
/...\ Paul Frazee < pfrazee@gmail.com > wrote: Hey Adam,
ZeroTier has been high on my watch-list. Very interesting
project. I'm guessing because of the subscription model that it has some central coordinator?
What I imagine doing with ZeroTier is running private web services and distributing the names (" http://couchdb.paul
Nicholas H.Tollervey [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Yesterday's London meet-up 2014-01-15 14:37:29 blog" demo for
web frameworks or "ToDo" lists for client side JS frameworks. Perhaps a
simple P2P chat application. If such
projects are to get traction with
developers they need to be very simple to use.
Sometimes I think what I'm doing is a bad case
/...\ looked at re-purposing some
> of the DHT work I'd been doing on the drogulus and Holger's execnet
>
project (http://codespeak.net/execnet/). Since then, I've been
> lobotomozing the drogulus in order to extract the DHT parts that
> could be re-used in p4p2p.net
Martin
Honermeyer < maze@strahlungsfrei.de >
wrote:
Some of
you might already have heard of it. There is a new
project
called Avatar [1] built by two finnish guys. It aims to
create a
distributed and secure P2P network which allows for
messaging and data
storage, among others. In order
/...\ implemented via JavaScript
in the web
browser. Looking the technology preview description [1],
this seems the
be one the most ambitious and thought-out
projects I have
seen so far.
For the peer-to-peer connections, they are currently using
an
(optional) locally-installed software called "Avatar Bridge"
which
Martin
Honermeyer < maze@strahlungsfrei.de >
wrote:
Some of
you might already have heard of it. There is a new
project
called Avatar [1] built by two finnish guys. It aims to
create a
distributed and secure P2P network which allows for
messaging and data
storage, among others. In order
/...\ implemented via JavaScript
in the web
browser. Looking the technology preview description [1],
this seems the
be one the most ambitious and thought-out
projects I have
seen so far.
For the peer-to-peer connections, they are currently using
an
(optional) locally-installed software called "Avatar Bridge"
which
Francis Irving [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Spring of User Experience 2014-03-05 10:55:24 have to worry about
> repeating IVs or verifying a MAC). I see that approach in NaCl or the new
> Python cryptography project. It takes time to write those abstractions, but
> it is rewarding.
Meant to ask, what "new Python cryptography project" are you referring
Geoffroy Couprie [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Spring of User Experience 2014-03-05 18:02:48 have to worry about
> repeating IVs or verifying a MAC). I see that approach in NaCl or the new
> Python cryptography project. It takes time to write those abstractions, but
> it is rewarding.
Meant to ask, what "new Python cryptography project" are you referring
schrieb Paul
Frazee:
Reading your response and reading Askemos' docs,
I'm inclined to say our projects solve fairly different
problems. Let me step through the Mint.com example to hopefully
clarify the differences.
Reading your message I'd agree. Looks like our projects solve kinda
complementary problems, which makes
Eric Mill [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Hello from WebTorrent 2013-12-08 18:36:58 slide about Redecentralize in my talk about WebRTC Data Black Magic  at RealtimeConf!
I wanted to share a bit about my new
project, WebTorrent . I'm building a browser BitTorrent client that requires no install (no plugin/extension/etc.) and fully-interoperates with the regular BitTorrent network
/...\ participate.
I think this is one of the most exciting uses of WebRTC to date, and I hope you'll check out the
project at http://webtorrent.io . Nothing works yet and there's still a lot of code to be written, but I'm pretty sure the concept is sound
data) in order to
go beyond what can be achieved with the classical centralized
approach.
 We have started a R&D
project with Orange and INRIA, but the
field is huge and many different approached and challenges must be
taken into account.
3/ Trust hardware: With INRIA
/...\ many initiatives
must be conducted so that an economy taking the portability
constraint as an opportunity can develop : for instance
standardization, research over interoperability,
project of
collaboration involving some big companies, new laws with better
definitions (I can help :-)
5/ decentralization of the DNS and of certificates
I cannot develop
BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA256
Loomio is a really cool
project! After struggling with Liquid
Democracy it was really a breath of fresh air. I'd like to talk to you
about how we might build similar tools on top of decentralised p2p
infrastructure.
Here's my Knight submission
/...\ Richard D. Bartlett wrote:
> Just got my submission in time:
> https://www.newschallenge.org/challenge/2014/submissions/the-loomio-project-democracy-as-mass-collaboration
>
> Pretty amazing feeling to see 4 other
projects on there mention
> Loomio :D
>
>
> On 19 March 2014 04:37, Paul Frazee <pfrazee@gmail.com
> <mailto:pfrazee@gmail.com
Michael Rogers < michael@briarproject.org > wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA256
Loomio is a really cool
project! After struggling with Liquid
Democracy it was really a breath of fresh air. I'd like to talk to you
about how we might build similar tools on top of decentralised
/...\ Bartlett wrote:
> Just got my submission in time:
> https://www.newschallenge.org/challenge/2014/submissions/the-loomio-project-democracy-as-mass-collaboration
>
> Â Pretty amazing feeling to see 4 other
projects on there mention
> Loomio :D
>
>
> On 19 March 2014 04:37, Paul Frazee < pfrazee@gmail.com
> <mailto: pfrazee@gmail.com
rich@loomio.org On 19 March 2014 09:41, Michael Rogers < michael@briarproject.org > wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA256
Loomio is a really cool
project! After struggling with Liquid
Democracy it was really a breath of fresh air. I'd like to talk to you
about how we might build
/...\ Bartlett wrote:
> Just got my submission in time:
> https://www.newschallenge.org/challenge/2014/submissions/the-loomio-project-democracy-as-mass-collaboration
>
> Â Pretty amazing feeling to see 4 other
projects on there mention
> Loomio :D
>
>
> On 19 March 2014 04:37, Paul Frazee < pfrazee@gmail.com
> <mailto: pfrazee@gmail.com
Paul Frazee [LibreList] Intros and current projects 2013-12-29 15:11:48 just wanted to say hi and encourage a roll call so we all can get to know each other. I'm involved with redecentralize
projects due to the privacy issue and out of an interest in simpler, user-modifiable software, which web systems tend to restrict. I work solo
/...\ Austin on a
project called Grimwire that's in this realm. I'm also involved in the distributed systems community here, though mostly as an enthusiast (I'm not implementing paxos or anything).
Nice meeting you all, and I look forward to seeing where this community goes. Paul
write about the subject, and round up what I can. So for example, I'm aware of Namecoin , and the OkTurtles project, which is trying to put Namecoin into practical application in a user-friendly way. I've also been sent this project by Agora Voting
maze@strahlungsfrei.de [LibreList] Avatar "operating system for the internet" 2014-02-02 17:46:44 Some of you might already have heard of it. There is a new
project
called Avatar [1] built by two finnish guys. It aims to create a
distributed and secure P2P network which allows for messaging and data
storage, among others. In order to be able
/...\ implemented via JavaScript in the web
browser. Looking the technology preview description [1], this seems the
be one the most ambitious and thought-out
projects I have seen so far.
For the peer-to-peer connections, they are currently using an
(optional) locally-installed software called "Avatar Bridge
Anish Mangal [LibreList] Hello! 2015-09-02 22:02:28 short introduction :)
I am a free-software and open-education volunteer mainly working on
the XSCE (short for School Server Community Edition) project. I've
volunteered for the OLPC project from 2010-2014 and worked in the
field in Paraguay and Uruguay, and helped develop the Australian
version of OLPC
David Burns [LibreList] meowbit enables .bit domains on windows 2014-03-31 08:56:31 meowbit and your browsers and apps can see .bit web pages
(windows only unfortunately).
Seems like recentralize might want to interview someone from that project.
There is a similar project called freespeechme that enables .bit for
firefox browsers only, on windows or linux.
.bit is a top level domain controlled
Stephan Tual [LibreList] London panelist? 2014-04-25 14:50:43 Everyone, my first message to this list so please be gentle :)
I'm the CCO for Ethereum. If you're not familiar with this
project, here's a quick summary: "Ethereum is a platform that makes it possible for any developer to write and distribute next-generation decentralized applications. Borrowing
/...\ from a network point of view :( Can anyone put me in touch with a decentralized networking expert, ideally someone with a completely opensource
project (hardware or software), who might be available in London towards the end of May? Thank you! -- Stephan Tual Chief Communications Officer Ethereum.org
Andrew Manning [LibreList] Video interview request: Red Matrix 2014-11-29 14:53:03 enjoy the Redecentralize video interviews and the list of projects on the website. I am happy that Red Matrix is in the list, because it is a really exciting project that has matured tremendously even in the past year. It would be great if you did a video
folks! Just wanted to share that the WebTorrent Project just shipped WebTorrent Desktop (BETA) today! https://webtorrent.io/desktop WebTorrent Desktop bridges the WebTorrent and BitTorrent networks. If enough people end up running it, BitTorrent in the browser will really happen. Projects like the Internet Archive can make huge files available
Feross Aboukhadijeh [LibreList] Hello from WebTorrent 2013-12-08 15:31:00 slide about Redecentralize in my talk about WebRTC Data Black Magic  at RealtimeConf!
I wanted to share a bit about my new
project, WebTorrent . I'm building a browser BitTorrent client that requires no install (no plugin/extension/etc.) and fully-interoperates with the regular BitTorrent network
/...\ participate.
I think this is one of the most exciting uses of WebRTC to date, and I hope you'll check out the
project at http://webtorrent.io . Nothing works yet and there's still a lot of code to be written, but I'm pretty sure the concept is sound
thanks for the focus on this
project, will be very interesting when we will include a mail server in Cozy ! Benjamin ANDRE - +33 (0)6 86 25 36 66 - Cozy.io
2014-04-23 15:52 GMT+02:00 Eric Mill < eric@konklone.com > :
Josh Tauberer's Mail
/...\ Just to say, I am getting myself in the habit of scheduling news Tweets from @redecentralize account.
So please email me either news about
projects as you spot them, or *good* background/research articles, and I'll Tweet them out.
Thanks!
Francis
-- konklone.com | @konklone
Jeremie Miller [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] London panelist? 2014-04-25 08:01:11 Everyone, my first message to this list so please be gentle :)
I'm the CCO for Ethereum. If you're not familiar with this
project, here's a quick summary: "Ethereum is a platform that makes it possible for any developer to write and distribute next-generation decentralized applications. Borrowing
/...\ from a network point of view :( Can anyone put me in touch with a decentralized networking expert, ideally someone with a completely opensource
project (hardware or software), who might be available in London towards the end of May? Thank you! -- Stephan Tual Chief Communications Officer Ethereum.org
Interviewing the Jitsi people would be great! VERY important
project that Jacob Appelbaum pitches regularly.
--Steve
On Aug 11, 2014 6:39 AM, < jackpot_@yopmail.com > wrote:
Hey there ! Your Goals  are great and common to billion people in the world ! A first step into redecentralize
/...\ cloud and communications systems like G**gle hangout and Skype. I found these very useful https://meet.jit.si https://jitsi.org open source and free
projects, with many cool options also to record your video sessions. I believe also the developer lead is open to an interview in case you'd like
useful isomorphism is pretty obvious. At least to computer
scientists, lawyers and ethics professionals as it turned out during
the
project. And the rigor it enforces upon the programmer, when
she is must treat code as if it was a contract did actually help
/...\ barely
found a CS master student who could identify all the contracts of
even a single trade transaction. When we began the
project I would
have failed badly myself.
However I don't understand you "vaguely similar". It seems not to
be that vague. It's just
everything’s become so
centralized. I think economics is only part of the
story.
As far as funding goes, three of the
projects you list are funded to some level by angel or
venture capital: BitTorrent, ZeroTier, and Sandstorm.
I think OwnCloud, which you didn’t mention
/...\ need toll booths
everywhere, but we need them somewhere. There must be
some mechanism for open and free “as in freedom”
projects to finance themselves. Otherwise they’re at a
permanent disadvantage.
Free “as in beer” also encourages the
development of dishonest pseudo-free business
Andrew Manning < andrew@reticu.li > wrote: I enjoy the Redecentralize video interviews and the list of projects on the website. I am happy that Red Matrix  is in the list, because it is a really exciting project that has matured tremendously even in the past year
Andrew Manning < andrew@reticu.li > wrote: I enjoy the Redecentralize video interviews and the list of projects on the website. I am happy that Red Matrix  is in the list, because it is a really exciting project that has matured tremendously even in the past year
Andrew Manning < andrew@reticu.li > wrote: I enjoy the Redecentralize video interviews and the list of projects on the website. I am happy that Red Matrix is in the list, because it is a really exciting project that has matured tremendously even in the past year. It would
Andrew Manning < andrew@reticu.li > wrote: I enjoy the Redecentralize video interviews and the list of projects on the website. I am happy that Red Matrix  is in the list, because it is a really exciting project that has matured tremendously even in the past year
Andrew Manning < andrew@reticu.li > wrote: I enjoy the Redecentralize video interviews and the list of projects on the website. I am happy that Red Matrix is in the list, because it is a really exciting project that has m
atured tremendously even in the past year
know we're really keen on the three pirate rule - http://wiki.pirateparty.be/index.php/PP_Structure_Proposal#Three_Pirate_Rule - and we'd love more pirates.
For the PyPy
project we had a similar rule: if two people from some
set agree on something they can act.
However, I am not sure how the three conditions
/...\ referencing the pirate party rules is of limited
value and i suggest to rather write down something more directly applicate
to the site and
project.
I am certainly not alone in appreciating if you, Irina and Francis stay
majorly involved, help people along and continue to drive and do
interviews
pirate party rules is of limited
> value and i suggest to rather write down something more directly applicate
> to the site and
project.
You’re right of course, we probably should extract the relevant parts.
> I am certainly not alone in appreciating if you, Irina
/...\ interviews specifically, and it’s my personal opinion, I’ve *love* to see interviews done by members of the community with
projects that interest them. I mean, I love both Francis and Ira, but equally I’d like to see different approaches to the interviews and more
pirate party rules is of limited
> value and i suggest to rather write down something more directly applicate
> to the site and
project.
Youâre right of course, we probably should extract the relevant parts.
> I am certainly not alone in appreciating
/...\ personal opinion, Iâve *love* to see interviews done by members of the community with
projects that interest them. I mean, I love both Francis and Ira, but equally Iâd like to see different approaches to the interviews and more
rules
>> is of limited value and i suggest to rather write down something
>> more directly applicate to the site and
project.
>
> You’re right of course, we probably should extract the relevant
> parts.
>
>> I am certainly not alone
/...\ specifically, and it’s my personal opinion,
> I’ve *love* to see interviews done by members of the community
> with
projects that interest them. I mean, I love both Francis and
> Ira, but equally I’d like to see different approaches
limited value and i suggest to rather write down something
>>> more directly applicate to the site and
project.
>>
>> You’re right of course, we probably should extract the relevant
>> parts.
>>
>>> I am certainly not alone
/...\ personal opinion,
>> I’ve *love* to see interviews done by members of the community
>> with
projects that interest them. I mean, I love both Francis and
>> Ira, but equally I’d like to see different approaches to the
>> interviews
limited value and i suggest to rather write down something
>>> more directly applicate to the site and
project.
>>
>> Youâre right of course, we probably should extract the relevant
>> parts.
>>
>>> I am certainly
/...\ personal opinion,
>> Iâve *love* to see interviews done by members of the community
>> with
projects that interest them. I mean, I love both Francis and
>> Ira, but equally Iâd like to see different approaches
Hello,
Cozy Cloud will be there, I hope we will present with some other
decentralized projects an initiative to make our projects
interoperable.
We think that the decentralized tools will fail if they don't
interoperate together. Without this interoperability, the basic
user will stay with Google, Dropbox
everything’s become so centralized. I think economics is only part of the story. As far as funding goes, three of the
projects you list are funded to some level by angel or venture capital: BitTorrent, ZeroTier, and Sandstorm. I think OwnCloud, which you didn’t mention
/...\ need toll booths everywhere, but we need them somewhere. There must be some mechanism for open and free “as in freedom”
projects to finance themselves. Otherwise they’re at a permanent disadvantage. Free “as in beer” also encourages the development of dishonest pseudo-free business
source. How's that for
> innovation!
>
Hi, I just subscribed to this list after watching an interview of the
organizers of this
project. I'm quite surprised to read, in the first
message I receive from the list, the sentence above.
How is "redecentralization" compatible with
/...\ read-only source" is just a fancy word for proprietary
software, or am I mistaken?
In the interview, I had understood that the
project was about "open
source" solutions. Now, open source is already free software without
ethics, but from there to "open read-only source
change!
These days we often have 5 servers (small, virtual, on EC2) almost whimsically just on one small project...
On Sun, 18 Oct 2015, at 06:56 AM, Hugh Barnard wrote:
Hi folks
This: https://twitter.com/alicemazzy/status/655306196128280576 is what a web search engine hardware configuration looked like
Adam Ierymenko < adam.ierymenko@zerotier.com > wrote: Hey all,
Many of you might remember this project from a while back. Just wanted to share the news:
https://www.zerotier.com/blog/?p=356
-Adam Ierymenko
-- Irina Bolychevsky @shevski
Francis Irving [LibreList] Tell me decentralization news! 2014-04-23 12:52:30 Just to say, I am getting myself in the habit of scheduling news Tweets from @redecentralize account.
So please email me either news about projects as you spot them, or *good* background/research articles, and I'll Tweet them out.
Thanks!
Francis
read...
Francis
On Fri, Dec 13, 2013 at 08:06:23PM +0000, Jonathan Deamer wrote:
> After the cool media coverage redecentralizing tech projects and
> Redecentralize.org itself have received recently (New Yorker
> http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/elements/2013/12/the-mission-to-decentralize-the-internet.htmland
> BBC
> http://www.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/series/pods - nice work, Irina!), I've added
Paul Frazee <pfrazee@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Hi Odinn,
>>
>> I'm not a huge fan of projecting p2p or decentralization as a way to
>> subvert laws. For one, it's a dangerously inaccurate. For two, it's not
>> what
Tic Nticsebastian [LibreList] (no subject) 2014-05-28 00:08:52 they make sense. There are a lot of other useful tools that we may use, like ArkOS on the raspberry's the Serval project for free messages and call's inside a city by using a hybrid "android access point". And many, many more that are here on your site
Paul Frazee <pfrazee@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi Odinn,
>
> I'm not a huge fan of projecting p2p or decentralization as a way to subvert laws. For one, it's a dangerously inaccurate. For two, it's not what I'm here for.
I can agree with this
Ross Jones [LibreList] The D14N project 2014-08-05 13:33:32 Just in case anyone hadn’t see it yet, there’s another project that’s been setup that is focusing on decentrali[sz]ation. The mailing list is at https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-decentralization and although it is still finding its feet
[LibreList] Hangoouts - SKyype Selfhost 2014-08-11 15:38:33 cloud and communications systems like G**gle hangout and Skype. I found these very useful https://meet.jit.si https://jitsi.org open source and free projects, with many cool options also to record your video sessions. I believe also the developer lead is open to an interview in case you'd like
David Burns [LibreList] Lantern anti-censorship tool 2014-08-14 10:32:47 list. It sounds like a potential security nightmare. The only obvious advantage versus tor would be speed? Hmmm...
Anyone know about this project and have an opinion? Dave
Jörg F. Wittenberger [LibreList] Zooko's triangle vs. Gödel incompleteness the 2014-08-21 12:22:09 problem for someone better at math than me. Though the result
should be tremendous interesting to many people and projects on this list.
The challenge: Show how precisely the challenge seen in Zooko's triangle
is different from precondition of Gödel's incompleteness theorem.
Alternative: Show that there
Steve Phillips [GG] Re: Zeronet and Twister anyone 2016-04-07 12:06:00 haven't tried ZeroNet but it sounds a lot like IPFS, which also seems to work well and is exciting. Other projects similar to those two it may be interesting to try are listed here:Â https://www.reddit.com/r/ipfs/comments/3l701i/what_are_the_differencessimilarities_with_zeronet/
Currently thinking October time. It will be a place to bring interested people together, showcase whatâs been happening with various projects, discover new ones and understand the evolving conversation about the possibilities and concerns of decentralization.
My hope is to get a group of people
read...
Francis
On Fri, Dec 13, 2013 at 08:06:23PM +0000, Jonathan Deamer wrote:
> After the cool media coverage redecentralizing tech projects and
> Redecentralize.org itself have received recently (New Yorker
> http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/elements/2013/12/the-mission-to-decentralize-the-internet.htmland
> BBC
> http://www.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/series/pods - nice work, Irina!), I've added
Adam Ierymenko [LibreList] ZeroTier now has seed funding 2015-03-31 12:13:15 Many of you might remember this project from a while back. Just wanted to share the news:
https://www.zerotier.com/blog/?p=356
-Adam Ierymenko
Eric Mill [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] FireChat in Economist 2014-06-02 11:34:27 running the same code that's in public source control.
But all the intentions, architecture, security, community engagement, good faith participation, etc. of the project are all obscured by closing the source. They exist apart.
On Mon, Jun 2, 2014 at 5:33 AM, Stephan Tual < stephan.tual@ethereum.org > wrote
Ira [LibreList] Redecentralize Conference! 2015-08-05 07:39:39 Currently thinking October time. It will be a place to bring interested people together, showcase whatâs been happening with various projects, discover new ones and understand the evolving conversation about the possibilities and concerns of decentralization.
My hope is to get a group of people
last month. Unfortunately I can't assist to the meeting in London, but I
will follow what's going on.
When we present our project to people, one of the biggest issue is to
make them understand the concept (and benefits) of decentralisation. I
was thinking about
Odinn, I'm not a huge fan of projecting p2p or decentralization as a way to subvert laws. For one, it's a dangerously inaccurate. For two, it's not what I'm here for.
None of the software you mention even addresses net neutrality. You use "censorship" very vaguely
will.sch [LibreList] RDC 15 2015-10-15 13:25:28 free. I have a background in internet marketing so I also look at ways
in which businesses can be ethical and how ethical projects can become
mainstream and adoptable without compromising their integrity. I
will be on hand at the conference along with all the other volunteers
Torbjörn Johnson [GG] A distributed CDN 2017-03-07 09:43:00 click the video in the catalogue and it plays in your browser (Chrome, Firefox, Opera). The product has its roots in the EU-funded project P2P-Next but has been further developed by DACC Systems AB in Sweden. Currently there are a few demo videos available but you are encouraged
Just to say, I am getting myself in the habit of scheduling news Tweets from @redecentralize account.
So please email me either news about projects as you spot them, or *good* background/research articles, and I'll Tweet them out.
Thanks!
Francis
-- konklone.com | @konklone
Steve Phillips [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Redecentralize Conference! 2015-08-05 00:56:09 Currently thinking October time. It will be a place to bring interested people together, showcase whatâs been happening with various projects, discover new ones and understand the evolving conversation about the possibilities and concerns of decentralization.
My hope is to get a group of people
Currently thinking October time. It will be a place to bring interested people together, showcase whatâs been happening with various projects, discover new ones and understand the evolving conversation about the possibilities and concerns of decentralization.
My hope is to get a group of people
Jeremie Miller [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Yesterday's London meet-up 2014-01-08 06:03:22 looked at re-purposing some of the DHT work
> I'd been doing on the drogulus and Holger's execnet project
> (http://codespeak.net/execnet/). Since then, I've been lobotomozing
> the drogulus in order to extract the DHT parts that could be re-used
> in p4p2p.net
crypto-coins. Be a good example and start today!
>>>
>> This all reminds me of Ted Nelson's "Project Xanadu" that (allegedly)
>> had such a content payment system built in. I believe Xanadu is over 50
>> years old and still being worked
Paul Frazee [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Introduction 2014-01-06 12:40:57 Adam, ZeroTier has been high on my watch-list. Very interesting project. I'm guessing because of the subscription model that it has some central coordinator?
What I imagine doing with ZeroTier is running private web services and distributing the names (" http://couchdb.paul ") among my virtual LAN. Is that feasible
think* it's relevant. Could be wrong though. This project enables UDP as a replacement for TCP to try and squeeze out some performance gains (TCP provides some reliability checks that UDP doesn't care about and those checks cost time). They'd then run HTTP and HTTPS
Kiktron RAKO [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] 2014-05-27 23:24:13 they make sense. There are a lot of other useful tools that we may use, like ArkOS on the raspberry's the Serval project for free messages and call's inside a city by using a hybrid "android access point". And many, many more that are here on your site
crypto-coins. Be a good example and start today!
>>>
>> This all reminds me of Ted Nelson's "Project Xanadu" that (allegedly)
>> had such a content payment system built in. I believe Xanadu is over 50
>> years old and still being worked
Giovanni P [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] GNUnet 2014-06-02 11:37:56 they probably want to make a Windows-friendly version.
However, the RTC version seems to be the best thing that could happen to the project, and maybe it could take some community help.
On Mon, Jun 2, 2014 at 11:11 AM, Ross Jones < ross@servercode.co.uk > wrote:
Nice that
Jörg F. Wittenberger [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] FireChat in Economist 2014-06-03 08:29:42 Ethereum using the global
blockchain approach.)
Best
/Jörg
But all the intentions, architecture, security, community
engagement, good faith participation, etc. of the project are
all obscured by closing the source. They exist apart.
On Mon, Jun 2, 2014 at 5:33 AM, Stephan
Tual < stephan.tual@ethereum.org >
wrote
Eric Mill [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] FireChat in Economist 2014-06-03 10:35:02 using the global
blockchain approach.)
Best
/Jörg
But all the intentions, architecture, security, community
engagement, good faith participation, etc. of the project are
all obscured by closing the source. They exist apart.
On Mon, Jun 2, 2014 at 5:33 AM, Stephan
Tual < stephan.tual@ethereum.org >
wrote
Paul Frazee [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] FireChat in Economist 2014-06-03 10:17:33 using the global
blockchain approach.)
Best
/Jörg
But all the intentions, architecture, security, community
engagement, good faith participation, etc. of the project are
all obscured by closing the source. They exist apart.
On Mon, Jun 2, 2014 at 5:33 AM, Stephan
Tual < stephan.tual@ethereum.org >
wrote
Jörg F. Wittenberger [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] FireChat in Economist 2014-06-04 10:32:38 Ethereum using the global
blockchain approach.)
Best
/Jörg
But all the intentions, architecture,
security, community engagement, good
faith participation, etc. of the project
are all obscured by closing the source.
They exist apart.
On Mon, Jun 2,
2014 at 5:33 AM, Stephan Tual < stephan.tual@ethereum.org >
wrote
great read, cool project overall :) Amen to what Adam said. On Fri, Jul 4, 2014 at 8:06 PM, Adam Ierymenko < adam.ierymenko@zerotier.com > wrote:
Q: OMFG THE NAT IS THE FIREWALL YOU BROKE IT THE FIREWALL!!1
A: Please remain calm. Each device being addressable from one another
dispensing with it. On Jul 4, 2014, at 11:09 AM, Joakim Stai < joakimstai@gmail.com > wrote: The FAQ was a great read, cool project overall :) Amen to what Adam said. On Fri, Jul 4, 2014 at 8:06 PM, Adam Ierymenko < adam.ierymenko@zerotier.com > wrote:
Q: OMFG
dispensing with it.
On Jul 4, 2014, at 11:09 AM, Joakim Stai < joakimstai@gmail.com > wrote:
The FAQ was a great read, cool project overall :) Amen to what Adam said. On Fri, Jul 4, 2014 at 8:06 PM, Adam Ierymenko < adam.ierymenko@zerotier.com > wrote:
Q: OMFG
dispensing with it.
On Jul 4, 2014, at 11:09 AM, Joakim Stai < joakimstai@gmail.com > wrote:
The FAQ was a great read, cool project overall :) Amen to what Adam said. On Fri, Jul 4, 2014 at 8:06 PM, Adam Ierymenko < adam.ierymenko@zerotier.com > wrote:
Q: OMFG
OSes should be secure. OSes should implement
app and service isolation properly. Authentication should be done with
crypto. That's the idea with this project. Make it as simple as possible to securely communicate with any device. All you need is the name because the key names are self-authenticating
favorite points were "Who decides what you have to hide" and the distinction between "Authority by architecture" versus "Authority by evidence."
Are there any projects you would like to link us to? On Fri, Jul 25, 2014 at 5:31 AM, Ira < shevski@gmail.com > wrote:
Thank you Nick
favorite points were "Who decides what you have to hide" and the distinction between "Authority by architecture" versus "Authority by evidence."
Are there any projects you would like to link us to? On Fri, Jul 25, 2014 at 5:31 AM, Ira < shevski@gmail.com > wrote:
Thank you Nick
favorite points were "Who decides what you have to hide" and the distinction between "Authority by architecture" versus "Authority by evidence."
Are there any projects you would like to link us to? On Fri, Jul 25, 2014 at 5:31 AM, Ira < shevski@gmail.com > wrote:
Thank you Nick
super)peer-peer: when I read this turn of phrase I had
an "aha!" moment. My work/thinking about DHT (via the drogulus project)
has led me to wonder about the nature of hierarchy - when someone or
some node in a network is more important than another. I skirt
defined virtual networks in data centers.) I've been following CJDNS for a while. I know it's being used by several community meshnet projects. Anyone tried it? I admit I haven't yet, but I've heard it basically does work but not perfectly. I'm curious about
defined virtual networks in data centers.)
I've been following CJDNS for a while. I know it's being used by several community meshnet projects. Anyone tried it? I admit I haven't yet, but I've heard it basically does work but not perfectly. I'm curious about
Jos Poortvliet [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Redecentralize Conference! 2015-08-06 17:18:37
defined virtual networks in data centers.)
I've been following CJDNS for a while. I know it's being used by several community meshnet projects. Anyone tried it? I admit I haven't yet, but I've heard it basically does work but not perfectly. I'm curious about
problem for someone better at math than me. Though the result
> should be tremendous interesting to many people and projects on this list.
>
> The challenge: Show how precisely the challenge seen in Zooko's triangle
> is different from precondition of Gödel's incompleteness theorem
cloud and communications systems like G**gle hangout and Skype. I found these very useful https://meet.jit.si https://jitsi.org open source and free projects, with many cool options also to record your video sessions. I believe also the developer lead is open to an interview in case you'd like
list. It sounds like a potential security nightmare. The only obvious advantage versus tor would be speed? Hmmm...
Anyone know about this project and have an opinion? Dave
list. It sounds like a potential security nightmare. The only obvious advantage versus tor would be speed? Hmmm...
Anyone know about this project and have an opinion? Dave
wondered if linear coding schemes might offer a way to make onion routing more efficient, but that there would be an awfully big research project that I don’t have time to do. :)
We can get most of the way there by making it at least difficult to gather
different file share and sync clouds.
http://karlitschek.de/2015/08/announcing-the-draft-federated-cloud-sharing-api/
We already shared this with a bunch of other open source file sync & share
projects and some standards bodies and are now looking for wider comments.
Ideally this gets picked up by W3C or another standards body
friends win these grants before, it is for real. And the initial submissions don't require a ton of effort. Even if your project is already started, is self-funded, whatever - it may be worth tossing your hat in the ring here for the opportunity to grow. I'll probably
crypto-coins. Be a good example and start today!
>>>
>> This all reminds me of Ted Nelson's "Project Xanadu" that (allegedly)
>> had such a content payment system built in. I believe Xanadu is over 50
>> years old and still
Android, I can successfully import QRCodes from monkeyscan if I
> install the Barcode Scanner from ZXing and GnuPrivacyGuard from
> the Guardian project:
>
> https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.google.zxing.client.android
>
>
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=info.guardianproject.gpg
>
> Unfortunately I haven't yet found a way to display a QRCode given
problem for someone better at math than me. Though the result
>> should be tremendous interesting to many people and projects on this list.
>>
>> The challenge: Show how precisely the challenge seen in Zooko's triangle
>> is different from precondition
disk-space). This is where the reputation system gets involved.
>
> For some interesting reading, I'll refer you to Dominic's project,
> https://github.com/dominictarr/secure-scuttlebutt .
>
>
>
>
> On Tue, Sep 2, 2014 at 4:44 PM, Dominic Tarr < dominic.tarr@gmail.com > wrote
Francis Irving [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] RDC 15 2015-10-17 01:17:28 free. I have a background in internet marketing so I also look at ways
in which businesses can be ethical and how ethical projects can become
mainstream and adoptable without compromising their integrity.
I
will be on hand at the conference along with all the other volunteers
resources (bandwidth, sometimes disk-space). This is where the reputation system gets involved.
For some interesting reading, I'll refer you to Dominic's project, https://github.com/dominictarr/secure-scuttlebutt .
On Tue, Sep 2, 2014 at 4:44 PM, Dominic Tarr < dominic.tarr@gmail.com > wrote:
I was very happy when I first
disk-space). This is where the reputation system gets involved.
>
> For some interesting reading, I'll refer you to Dominic's project,
> https://github.com/dominictarr/secure-scuttlebutt.
>
>
>
>
> On Tue, Sep 2, 2014 at 4:44 PM, Dominic Tarr <dominic.tarr@gmail.com> wrote
where the reputation system gets involved.
>> >
>> > For some interesting reading, I'll refer you to Dominic's project,
>> > https://github.com/dominictarr/secure-scuttlebutt.
above) to
> invest into polishing the software and the experience, allowing it to
> build new services (GOTO 1)
Bingo! This kind of project can easily eat a lifetime. It can burn
thousands of <currency>, feed dozens of developers for a couple of
years… and still
sometimes disk-space). This is where the reputation system gets involved.
>
> For some interesting reading, I'll refer you to Dominic's project,
> https://github.com/dominictarr/secure-scuttlebutt.
OK, timeout. I'm just recovering from a cold. Huge backlog becoming
even larger.
Best
schrieb Paul Frazee:
> For some interesting reading, I'll refer you to Dominic's project,
> https://github.com/dominictarr/secure-scuttlebutt.
>
>
Got one question here: this seems to replicate data. Does it protect
against malicious updates too?
To illustrate: I'm currently working on some simple payment system
Wittenberger < Joerg.Wittenberger@softeyes.net > wrote:
Am 03.09.2014 01:25, schrieb Paul Frazee:
> For some interesting reading, I'll refer you to Dominic's project,
> https://github.com/dominictarr/secure-scuttlebutt .
>
>
Got one question here: this seems to replicate data. Does it protect
against malicious updates
Joerg.Wittenberger@softeyes.net> wrote:
> Am 03.09.2014 01:25, schrieb Paul Frazee:
>> For some interesting reading, I'll refer you to Dominic's project,
>> https://github.com/dominictarr/secure-scuttlebutt.
>>
>>
>
> Got one question here: this seems to replicate data. Does it protect
> against
wrote:
>> Am 03.09.2014 01:25, schrieb Paul Frazee:
>>> For some interesting reading, I'll refer you to Dominic's project,
>>> https://github.com/dominictarr/secure-scuttlebutt.
>>>
>>>
>> Got one question here: this seems to replicate data. Does
linear coding schemes might offer a way to make onion routing more
> efficient, but that there would be an awfully big research project
> that I don’t have time to do. :)
There have been some papers about anonymity systems based on secret
sharing and network coding
Filipe Catraia [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Redecentralize Conference! 2015-08-06 20:00:51 will be a place to bring interested people together, showcase what’s
>> been happening with various projects, discover new ones and understand the
>> evolving conversation about the possibilities and concerns of
>> decentralization.
>>
>> My hope is to get a group
sign up if you think you'll want tickets.
This is great news. I'll be there with others from the Internet Cube[1] project.
See you there !
taziden
[1] http://internetcu.be
Benjamin ANDRE [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Hello ! 2013-12-09 00:08:01 nice ! In fact I am contributing to two french projects. 1/ The white paper about platforms neutrality that I already introduced. This white paper is requested by the government to a commission of "digital wise guys" - the "CNNum" -, which is composed of about 20 persons, such as Tristan Nitot from
setup an offline static tile
server (i.e. not editing the database) to serve tiles.
For the Internet in a Box/School Server Community Edition project I
setup tilesets which may be custom generated (zoom levels, styles) and
used offline.
I am also using SECN (Openwrt) Batman based mesh networking
think this is the first message of this kind received on the
list.
> In the interview, I had understood that the project was about "open
> source" solutions. Now, open source is already free software without
> ethics, but from there to "open read-only source
Jörg F. Wittenberger [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Spring of User Experience 2014-03-03 14:29:51 worked";
this is how it worked out, even though not always as intended:
In contrast to the mentioned "proof me wrong" attitude, out project
began with the proof a security property. We then built a system,
which abides the a rule set we could proof secure. Let me share
holger krekel [LibreList] any meeting point for tonight? 2015-10-16 08:18:38 free. I have a background in internet marketing so I also look at ways in which businesses can be ethical and how ethical projects can become mainstream and adoptable without comprom
> ising their integrity.
>
> I will be on hand at the conference along with all the other
read your email too quickly (though FWIW, for some reason I also initially assumed you were a Telegram developer - probably because you said "our project" without a name), and you were just describing something that happened to you.
Generally speaking, Telegram's problem is the same
have a
> background in internet marketing so I also look at ways in which
> businesses can be ethical and how ethical projects can become
> mainstream and adoptable without compromising their integrity.
>>
>> I
> will be on hand at the conference along with
which are
decentralized, democratic
and
economically sustainable .
Would you like to join us?
P2P Models ,
a 5-year 1.5M⬠research project,
is hiring :
- a Project/Communication Manager
- a Senior Blockchain Developer
They will join an interdisciplinary team in Madrid,
doing research & building tools with social
impact
friends win these grants before, it is for real. And the initial submissions don't require a ton of effort. Even if your project is already started, is self-funded, whatever - it may be worth tossing your hat in the ring here for the opportunity to grow. I'll probably
organize piecemeal encrypted transport.
>
Well, besides the fact transport is only one part of the equations, there
are plenty of free software project addressing this need, and they have no
need to restrain use, modification, distribution, or access to their source
code in any way to do so. Moreover
wifi at fault, so I wouldn't worry about it. Reading your response and reading Askemos' docs, I'm inclined to say our projects solve fairly different problems. Let me step through the Mint.com example to hopefully clarify the differences.
Mint's application is hosted by remote servers which proxy
Christoph Witzany [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Redecentralize Conference! 2015-08-05 09:48:17 Currently thinking October time. It will be a place to bring interested people together, showcase whatâs been happening with various projects, discover new ones and understand the evolving conversation about the possibilities and concerns of decentralization.
My hope is to get a group of people
broadcast / multicast
depending on IPv4 vs. v6) and global discovery across networks with a
discovery server.
The global discovery server is something the Syncthing project hosts
by default. If you are always on the same network though, you could
just disable global discovery, since it's not needed there
organize piecemeal encrypted transport.
>
Well, besides the fact transport is only one part of the equations,
there are plenty of free software project addressing this need, and they
have no need to restrain use, modification, distribution, or access to
their source code in any way to do so. Moreover
Christian de Larrinaga [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] RDC 15 2015-10-16 13:38:46 free. I have a background in internet marketing so I also look at ways
in which businesses can be ethical and how ethical projects can become
mainstream and adoptable without compromising their integrity. I
will be on hand at the conference along with all the other volunteers
Paul Frazee < pfrazee@gmail.com > wrote:
>
>> Hi Odinn,
>>
>> I'm not a huge fan of projecting p2p or decentralization as a way to
>> subvert laws. For one, it's a dangerously inaccurate. For two, it's not
>> what
Paul Frazee < pfrazee@gmail.com > wrote:
>
>> Hi Odinn,
>>
>> I'm not a huge fan of projecting p2p or decentralization as a way to
>> subvert laws. For one, it's a dangerously inaccurate. For two, it's not
>> what
free. I have a background in internet marketing so I also look at ways
in which businesses can be ethical and how ethical projects can become
mainstream and adoptable without compromising their integrity.
Â
I
will be on hand at the conference along with all the other volunteers
Just got my submission in time: https://www.newschallenge.org/challenge/2014/submissions/the-loomio-project-democracy-as-mass-collaboration
Pretty amazing feeling to see 4 other projects on there mention Loomio :D On 19 March 2014 04:37, Paul Frazee < pfrazee@gmail.com > wrote:
Here's my submission. Looks good Eric. https://www.newschallenge.org/challenge/2014/submissions/httplocal-a-framework-for-open-architecture-web-applications
read...
Francis
On Fri, Dec 13, 2013 at 08:06:23PM +0000, Jonathan Deamer wrote:
> After the cool media coverage redecentralizing tech projects and
> Redecentralize.org itself have received recently (New Yorker
> http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/elements/2013/12/the-mission-to-decentralize-the-internet.htmland
> BBC
> http://www.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/series/pods - nice work, Irina!), I've added
crypto-coins. Be a good example and start today!
> >
>
> This all reminds me of Ted Nelson's "Project Xanadu" that (allegedly)
> had such a content payment system built in. I believe Xanadu is over 50
> years old and still being worked upon
crypto-coins. Be a good example and start today!
> >
>
> This all reminds me of Ted Nelson's "Project Xanadu" that (allegedly)
> had such a content payment system built in. I believe Xanadu is over 50
> years old and still being worked upon
Paul Frazee < pfrazee@gmail.com > wrote:
>
>> Hi Odinn,
>>
>> I'm not a huge fan of projecting p2p or decentralization as a way to
>> subvert laws. For one, it's a dangerously inaccurate. For two, it's not
>> what
free. I have a background in internet marketing so I also look at ways
in which businesses can be ethical and how ethical projects can become
mainstream and adoptable without compromising their integrity.
I
will be on hand at the conference along with all the other volunteers
haltingstate@gmail.com [LibreList] (no subject) 2013-12-08 19:39:44 golang secp256k1 wrapper for elliptic curve cryptography (secp251ks is curve used by Bitcoin) and am working on a few transport layer security projects.
https://github.com/haltingstate
Bastien Guerry [LibreList] FLOSS4P2P: Call for Participation 2015-02-18 10:28:26 London workshop in March, gathering FLOSS projects that are
building software for peer production and organization, with a focus
on distributed platforms. Scholarships to attend are offered to
grassroots communities.
** Context **
We know that the Internet was originally decentralized, with protocols
and services built by hackers. However, with the arrival
Jonathan Deamer [LibreList] Redecentralization on Wikipedia 2013-12-13 20:06:23 After the cool media coverage redecentralizing tech projects and Redecentralize.org itself have received recently (New Yorker http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/elements/2013/12/the-mission-to-decentralize-the-internet.html and BBC http://www.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/series/pods - nice work, Irina!), I've added a brief section to the Wikipedia page on decentralization.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decentralization#Centralization_and_redecentralization_of_the_Internet
I'll try to update as there
web.monkeysphere.info/monkeysign/
On Android, I can successfully import QRCodes from monkeyscan if I
install the Barcode Scanner from ZXing and GnuPrivacyGuard from the
Guardian project:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.google.zxing.client.android
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=info.guardianproject.gpg
Unfortunately I haven't yet found a way to display a QRCode given a
key fingerprint, and GnuPrivacyGuard looks
Retout <tim@retout.co.uk> wrote:
> Any talks worth picking out?
One of the lightning talks from today (day 2) was about a project
called "kinko" that seeks to make email encryption easy to use, by
putting a box in your home:
https://kinko.me/
The website says that
Paul Frazee < pfrazee@gmail.com > wrote:
>
>> Hi Odinn,
>>
>> I'm not a huge fan of projecting p2p or decentralization as a way to
>> subvert laws. For one, it's a dangerously inaccurate. For two, it's not
>> what
Paul Frazee [GG] Re: Zeronet and Twister anyone 2016-04-07 10:23:00 Cool, Juh. What's your involvement with the projects? ZeroNet interests me more, so I dug into the FAQ. Here's the interesting bits: It only uses BTC's crypto primitives, but not it's blockchain. I does use namecoin, though. https://zeronet.readthedocs.org/en/latest/faq/#does-zeronet-uses-bitcoins-blockchain Site addresses *are* wallets, but they
Nicholas H.Tollervey [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Yesterday's London meet-up 2014-01-08 10:49:44 looked at re-purposing some of the DHT work
I'd been doing on the drogulus and Holger's execnet project
(http://codespeak.net/execnet/). Since then, I've been lobotomozing
the drogulus in order to extract the DHT parts that could be re-used
in p4p2p.net.
Andi, Tom, Florian
schrieb Paul Frazee:
> Cool, Juh. What's your involvement with the projects?
I am only a user. ZeroNet is quite easy to use. As you host the sites
you read it is very fast and responsive.
And you can setup a tor proxy to surf and publish anonymously
Hello, Redecentralizers!
We've launched 'Cryptocurrencies for Good: Revolutionizing
Microdonations' as an indiegogo project. This currently involves myself,
Filipe Farinha, and technical support from Cryptostorm.
And just in case you are interested, there is wine.
Here's our page, launched today:
http://igg.me/at/microdonations-using-cryptocurrencies
As the world changes, so must
Paul Frazee < pfrazee@gmail.com > wrote:
>
>> Hi Odinn,
>>
>> I'm not a huge fan of projecting p2p or decentralization as a way to
>> subvert laws. For one, it's a dangerously inaccurate. For two, it's not
>> what
Adam Ierymenko < adam.ierymenko@zerotier.com > wrote: Hey all,
Many of you might remember this project from a while back. Just wanted to share the news:
https://www.zerotier.com/blog/?p=356
-Adam Ierymenko
Adam Ierymenko [LibreList] ZeroTier One for Windows 2014-03-07 15:52:33 just released the first binary package of ZeroTier One for Windows. You can find
out more about the project here if you don't know about it already:
https://www.zerotier.com/
The Windows version is not yet linked on the downloads page, because I'd like a few
people other than
friends win these grants before, it is for real. And the initial submissions don't require a ton of effort. Even if your project is already started, is self-funded, whatever - it may be worth tossing your hat in the ring here for the opportunity to grow. I'll probably
Turkey, the timing is right. I'll be helping a bit at the event. Lots of mesh folks (through the Commotion project) will be there. Nina
CitizenWeb Project (developer of self-hosted server and data sharing
platform arkOS) is looking for a volunteer Associate Program Director to
help start a team! If you are in Montreal, Toronto, Ottawa or New York
City, check it out:
https://citizenweb.is/news/2014/03/assistant-program-director/
Please share far and wide if you know