On 2021-05-31 at 11:38, Marco Möller wrote: > On 31.05.21 16:01, Stefan Monnier wrote:
[that to...@tuxteam.de wrote:] >>> Thanks, but I'll prefer a decentralised, end-to-end encryptable, >>> well established messaging infrastructure with a rich choice of >>> user and transfer agents. It's called e-mail. >> >> Actually, matrix.org aims to be that as well. It probably doesn't >> yet qualify for "rich choice" (e.g. there is a matrix-client.el but >> it doesn't support encryption yet), but other than that, it's >> pretty much there. > > The project currently lists many more clients > (https://matrix.org/clients/), and here > (https://matrix.org/clients-matrix/) 12 clients are marked to provide > E2E encryption. A relatively quick search finds a few clients in the Debian repository: nheko, quaternion, matrix-mirage, weechat-matrix, spectral. There's also pantalaimon, described as an 'E2EE-aware proxy daemon for matrix clients', and libqmatrixclient*, a 'Qt5 library to write cross-platform clients for Matrix' (which is apparently used by quaternion). Of those, matrix-mirage specifically notes end-to-end encryption support, and weechat-matrix marks it as experimental; the others don't seem to mention it one way or the other, at least not in the package description. nheko, quaternion, and pantalaimon are all in both stable and testing; the others are currently in testing but not stable. I haven't previously looked closely at Matrix, but I'm going to have to check some of these out and see what I think. -- The Wanderer The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man. -- George Bernard Shaw
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature