On 08/26/2014 06:47 AM, Martin S wrote: > 2014-08-26 13:50 GMT+02:00 Griffin Boyce <grif...@cryptolab.net>: > >> Actually, what you're describing are some of the more common uses >> of hidden services. Some people run xmpp or irc servers as hidden >> services to have truly private chat among their friends (plus you >> can run a web client like qwebirc). A human rights nonprofit >> recently asked me to set up a PGP public key server as a hidden >> service. > > Which would too a part describe our organisation too ... good to > know it's being done. > >> Lots of people run cozy.io instances as hidden services for >> "personal clouds" calendar, contacts, task list, documents etc. > > We run an ownCloud server so I have experience with that. Unless > anyone knows anything to deter me I'd use that, but still, again, > good to know it's being done! >> >> For audio chat, Mumble does okay. I probably wouldn't recommend it >> as an enterprise solution when used over Tor, but it's pretty good >> when using it in push-to-talk mode. > > We're pretty small so it might work (150 in organisation + partners > then and not many would be using it at the same time) - only > experience I have with Mumble though is as a game communication tool > for Eve Online =)
You might find the thread "Free Decentralized VOIP over Tor" (15-17 Aug) of interest. Linphone (using standard SIP protocol) apparently works well via OnionCat. > Thanks for your thoughts! > > /Martin S > -- tor-talk mailing list - tor-talk@lists.torproject.org To unsubscribe or change other settings go to https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk