qTox has been pretty good for me, and I got a lot of friends to move over to it. The calls are absolute garbage, and every now and then there will be issues with people disconnecting seemingly at random, but all-in-all it is decent to use. The only thing that worries me is that key verification is based on the fact that you have an entire public key as a user's ID. This lacks usability for non-technical users, especially since very few people actually exchange IDs over a secure third channel. On 10/07/2016 01:19 PM, Razer wrote:
I've had qtox on my machine for some time now.
Note that the interface is a little obscure about how to hook up with others. Click your username at the top and you'll see a string that looks like:
E611C7673C4C9C84C7F53BD8A2DF46C3131CB260E5758392B6B22FE18072C57569661208F92E
AFA Signal, desktop, they want to run it in Chrome only. For some reason that makes me nervous... Maybe if they develop a stand-alone like Telegram...
Rr
On 10/07/2016 10:07 AM, grarpamp wrote:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=12657891 https://tox.chat/
Whether it's corporations or governments, digital surveillance today is widespread. Tox is easy-to-use software that connects you with friends and family without anyone else listening in. While other big-name services require you to pay for features, Tox is completely free and comes without advertising — forever.
Instant messaging
Chat instantly across the globe with Tox's secure messages.
Voice
Keep in touch with friends and family using Tox's completely free and encrypted voice calls.
Video
Catch up face to face, over Tox's secure video calls.
Screen sharing
Share your desktop with your friends with Tox's screen sharing.
File sharing
Trade files, with no artificial limits or caps.
Groups
Chat, call, and share video and files with the whole gang in Tox's group chats.
What makes Tox different?
Tox is made by the people who use it — people fed up with the existing options that spy on us, track us, censor us, and keep us from innovating. There are no corporate interests, and no hidden agendas. Just the simplicity and functionality that are set free when people truly want to connect.
Encrypted
Everything you do with Tox is encrypted using open-source libraries. The only people who can see your conversations are the people you're talking with.
Distributed
Tox has no central servers that can be raided, shut down, or forced to turn over data — the network is made up of its users. Say goodbye to server outages!
Free
Tox is free software. That's free as in freedom, as well as in price. This means Tox is yours — to use, modify, and share — because Tox is developed by and for the users.
-- Kevin Gallagher PhD Candidate, Department of Computer Science New York University Tandon School of Engineering 2 MetroTech Center, 10th Floor Brooklyn, NY 11201 Phone: (757) 202-8961 Email: kevin.gallagher@nyu.edu Key Fingerprint: D02B 25CB 0F7D E276 06C3 BF08 53E4 C50F 8247 4861