Free Code Chat Apps

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Revision as of 20:12, 20 May 2019 by Strypey (talk | contribs) (added F-Droid note, added more ChatSecure details)
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Introduction

Most people are familiar with proprietary chat apps like Skype, FaceTime, FB Messenger, WhatsApp, Hangouts, WeChat, and so on. Chat apps differ from email in that they are designed mainly for use by two people who are online at the same time, having a back-and-forth conversation made up of short messages (1 or 2 sentences at a time). Most modern chat apps also support voice and video calling and voice mail. This page has information about chat apps whose code is available as a commons, under a free software license, allowing it to be audited by the community, or modified ("forked") to make new versions or new apps. --Strypey (talk) 16:34, 20 May 2019 (UTC)

Name License Platforms supported Topology Protocol(s) Used Network Transport(s) Text/ Voice/ Video? Group chat End-to-End Encrypted Other features languages supported
Briar GNU GPLv3+ mobile distributed Tor internet, wifi, bluetooth text only yes yes forums, blogs ?
ChatSecure GNU GPLv3+ iOS federated XMPP internet text yes optional voice mail, file transfer ?
Conversations GNU GPLv3 mobile federated XMPP, MUC, OMEMO, PGP internet text, (voice/ video?) yes optional file transfer, short voice mails ?
Jami GNU GPLv3+ desktop and mobile distributed SIP internet text, audio, video yes yes none ?
Riot Apache 2.0 web, mobile, desktop federated Matrix internet text, audio, video yes optional (for now) file transfer ?
TRIfa GNU GPLv2 Android distributed Tox, Tor (with Orbot) internet text, audio, video ? yes none image sharing, file transfer, video embeds ?
Wire GNU GPLv3 (clients) / AGPLv3 (server) web, mobile, desktop centralized (federation is planned) ? internet text, audio, video yes yes ?
Zom ? mobile federated Matrix text yes yes file transfer ?


Other notes:

Briar adding contacts requires in-person scanning of QR codes
Zom began as updated version of the old ChatSecure for Android code, using XMPP, but later moved to the Matrix protocol. The blog piece at that link describes a plan to begin a new ChatSecure for Android, as a fork of Conversations, making it also an XMPP client, but this effort was abandoned

See also:

  • F-Droid: Aims to offer a complete collection of Android apps that can be built from free code with no proprietary dependencies. Other chat clients they list: https://search.f-droid.org/?q=chat