Hi,
Indeed you can use Linphone for E2E encrypted chat if both participants
are using Linphone and if you are using our sip.linphone.org proxy server.
In the app, simply toggle the green shield on to enable E2E encrypted chat.
Check our website for more infos: https://linphone.org/secure-communications
Cheers,
Sylvain Berfini
Software Engineer @ Belledonne Communications
Le 04/05/2021 à 02:06, Eric Shields | #MassTransitHonchkrow via
Linphone-users a écrit :
E2E Encryption when it comes to chats requires both participants to be
using the same setup. If you send a message that's encrypted to a DID
endpoint that doesn't support it, they'll get gibberish.
-------- Original Message --------
On May 3, 2021, 4:47 PM, Stuart D Gathman < [email protected]> wrote:
On Mon, 3 May 2021, Greg Troxel wrote:
> Maciej Morycinski <[email protected]> writes:
>
>> ...although that is not the same as "end-to-end encrypted". I
am not
>> sure, but I don't believe they are end-to-end encrypted.
>
> Indeed, a good point.
If you use linphone in P2P mode - over a mesh VPN (where there is
no "VPN server"), then it is e2e encrypted thanks to the VPN.
You add the raw IP6 to your address book on linphone just as
easily as a
phone number or domain based sip address.
An article about using Cjdns as the VPN:
https://fedoramagazine.org/decentralize-common-fedora-apps-cjdns
<https://fedoramagazine.org/decentralize-common-fedora-apps-cjdns>/
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