termpair
mailvelope
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termpair | mailvelope | |
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8 | 1 | |
1,585 | 1,650 | |
- | 0.5% | |
3.2 | 5.3 | |
almost 2 years ago | 7 days ago | |
TypeScript | JavaScript | |
MIT License | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
termpair
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ProtonMail: Important clarifications regarding arrest of climate activist
A counter to this would be to let users deploy their open source client [0] themselves to wherever (as one example, this is something that TermPair implements [1]).
[0] https://github.com/ProtonMail/WebClients
[1] https://github.com/cs01/termpair/#static-hosting
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Hacker News top posts: May 31, 2021
TermPair: Terminal sharing with AES-GCM 128 bit end-to-end encryption\ (34 comments)
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TermPair: Terminal sharing with AES-GCM 128 bit end-to-end encryption
From a quick skim it looks like the key is base64 encoded into the URL in terminal_id param, so presumably you just share the URL and the collaborator stays on the URL with the key? If the key is ephemeral/regenerated for each session it seems to eliminate most of your concerns.
https://github.com/cs01/termpair/blob/1d273fa306a543fefbf2cf...
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GoTTY – Share your terminal as a web application
This looks pretty similar to the few years old TermPair [0], featuring AES-GCM 128 bit end-to-end encryption and built with FastApi (Python).
[0] https://github.com/cs01/termpair
mailvelope
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ProtonMail: Important clarifications regarding arrest of climate activist
Mailvelope ( https://github.com/mailvelope/mailvelope) is an open source extension for Chrome and Firefox that allows users to use openpgp encryption with any webmail provider. Unfortunately, I have only one contact who has corresponded with me with pgp. But two others (both activists) use ProtonMail (my only reason for having an account on the service) -- but not Tor (their ProtonMail use predates the latest "explainer"). At least when it comes to email, I'm going to go out on a limb and say people should _never_ trust it for sensitive communications. Message content itself can be protected by pgp encryption (if people would bother to use it), but there's no watertight way to consistently avoid the kind of relationship mapping that nation states and transnational corporations have been doing for the last two decades. That game is already over, and Big Brother won -- no matter who you use for email.
What are some alternatives?
tmate - Instant Terminal Sharing
ProtonMail Web Client - Monorepo hosting the proton web clients
simplex-chat - SimpleX - the first messaging network operating without user identifiers of any kind - 100% private by design! iOS, Android and desktop apps 📱!
webext-signed-pages - A browser extension to verify the authenticity (PGP signature) of web pages
cpace - A CPace PAKE implementation using libsodium.
notionapi - A Notion API SDK, written in Golang
node-pty - Fork pseudoterminals in Node.JS
pq-dashboard - FastAPI frontend for monitoring PQ queues
tty-share - Share your linux or osx terminal over the Internet.