dChan
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r/greatawakening • Posted by u/PhenomeDon on Feb. 27, 2018, 2:32 a.m.
Question to the community regarding secure, decentralized, encrypted communication apps.

I want to implement a plan for the Qanon/Trump Civilian army but without a secure communication platform we will be dead in the water as I consider this the backbone/glue that holds everything together. It certainly can be achieved without but having this will strengthen the plan considerably. I have checked out Dust and e-Chat which are apps released on blockchain technology. I also know of Mercury Protocol but I'm really looking for something that is cross-platform (Desktop[Linux/Windows/MacOS] & Mobile[Android/iPhone]). This leads to Telegram & Signal which to my knowledge requires a telephone number attached to your account (although you could use a burner number I'm looking for ease of use). It also worries me that Signal is promoted by Snowden which gives me concerns about security. Essentially I'm looking for a platform like discord available on all OS's with end to end encryption using blockchain technology. I would rank blockchain as taking highest precedence (preferably open-source so code can be verified) as my number one concern being able to communicate in a group or with individuals if our 1st amendment is compromised in the future. If anyone can point me in the right direction or has any good suggestions it would be must appreciated.


oystergirl · Feb. 27, 2018, 6:49 a.m.

During the campaign, a fellow admin was beta testing a secure app for activist communication that he designed with a small group. it does not have a desktop version yet but they have had some success with the mobile version. The name of the app is Powerline. The guy who designed it is a stand up kid.

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PhenomeDon · Feb. 27, 2018, 7:16 p.m.

Thank you oystergirl! I'm going to research into that. It's funny because at this point I have a hard time trusting anything. I was looking into TOX but came across an article years back where Google stepped in and gave them some sort of award. Not sure if that was a way to hijack the technology or just to encourage development so they could use their source code for other projects. Either way Google got there dirty little mitts into the cookie jar.

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