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From: | Brendan Miller |
Subject: | gnu:net and IPFS: integration possible or desirable for social networking app development? |
Date: | Sun, 9 Feb 2020 18:03:35 -0800 |
Hi, all. I am a web/web3 developer interested in helping to build
open source, private, decentralized alternatives to social
platforms like Facebook, WeChat, etc. I am coming from a technical
starting point of IPFS, Ethereum blockchain and secret contract
platforms like Enigma and Oasis, but I am not yet committed to a
certain tech stack, and I certainly don't want to reinvent any
wheels.
I am starting to recognize that some of the privacy protecting architecture I was envisioning layering on top of IPFS, for example, was not really at the right networking layer - it should be handled at a lower layer. As a part of that realization, I have recently found gnu:net, reclaim:id and related projects and am excited about the attention you give these layers.
I was imagining that the apps I would like to build would be mobile apps so that they could be accessible to the majority of users, be able to protect the user's private keys, and also be able to run in a fully decentralized/mesh situation when needed/desired.
Textile (https://textile.io/) on top of IPFS interests me because they are open source, and provide useful functionalities that I would need. And they are set up for mobile apps. As an example of what can be done with Textile, you can take a look at this functional photo sharing/messaging React Native mobile app: https://github.com/textileio/photos
I have also been looking at open source decentralized identity
systems like https://github.com/uport-project/uport-connect,
https://github.com/iden3 and https://github.com/jonnycrunch/ipid.
Fundamentally, I am an app developer, but one who cares about
ensuring decentralization and privacy by default, with the ability
to safely share identity claims, user groups and
content/media/files when desired. My goal is to build on top of as
much existing, reliable, maintained open source code as possible
so we can show users the full functionality they expect from
existing social networking apps to make it attractive to switch
over.
My questions are these:
Thanks for any insights into these questions, and for your work on gnu:net.
Best,
Brendan
https://www.linkedin.com/in/brendanmiller/
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