Hi all, time for a status update.

The pace of coding on Freenet has increased dramatically since the  
release of the 0.7 alpha. We now have an active group of core  
developers working with Matthew Toseland (our full-time dev), and a  
growing community of developers working on third-party applications  
through the Freenet Client Protocol. After the rather stagnant period  
before the decision to switch to a darknet model, Freenet is now more  
active and vibrant than it has ever been.

Current estimates put the size of the darknet between 300-400 nodes,  
not bad for a hard-to-use alpha release, and we are seeing an average  
of about 50 commits per week from developers. We have 4 Google Summer  
of Code projects working on everything from a new load-balancing  
mechanism, to a cross-platform file upload and download utility  
(called "Thaw"), and a flexible user-friendly installer.

We have also been thinking hard about how to minimize the inherent  
usability challenges posed by a darknet approach, and with this in  
mind, have implemented support for third party applications to add  
and remove darknet connections via FCP. This means we can do things  
like write IM plugins to make it very easy to establish connections  
to friends.

We will also be deploying "opennet" functionality, so that users who  
don't need the security offered by the darknet, can just start up a  
node and get going immediately, as with previous versions of Freenet,  
but this time with the benefits of NAT circumvention and a UDP-based  
transport.

On the more administrative side, Florent Daigni?re has been a big  
help, setting up a bug tracker (https://bugs.freenetproject.org/),  
and a variety of other tools to help streamline Freenet's development  
process.

Its not all good news though, despite the generosity of many of our  
users, donations to the project have been unable to keep-up with the  
$2300 per month (a meager salary for a software developer in the UK)  
needed by Matthew Toseland, and right now we are on the verge of not  
being able to continue to pay him - which would obviously be terrible  
for the project. In the past, users and supporters of the project  
have been extremely generous when we have asked them to help us out  
of a financial hole, and I am hoping that you can be similarly  
generous on this occasion.

With this in mind, I would ask that you visit our donations page on  
the website, it can be found at:

    http://freenetproject.org/donate.html

And please donate anything you can spare.

Many thanks,

Ian Clarke,
Freenet Project Coordinator.

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