Winehole23
07-27-2012, 12:52 PM
This Cute Chat Site Could Save Your Life And Help Overthrow Your Government
By Quinn Norton (http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/author/quinnnorton/)
http://www.wired.com/images_blogs/threatlevel/2012/07/nadim-660x450.jpg (http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2012/07/crypto-cat-encryption-for-all/nadim/)
Nadim Kobeissi, creator of Crypto.cat, spoke in mid-July at the HOPE conference, held at New York’s Hotel Pennsylvania every two years. Credit: Quinn Norton/Wired
Twenty-one-year-old college student Nadim Kobeissi is from Canada, Lebanon and the internet.
He is the creator of Cryptocat (https://crypto.cat/), a project “to combine my love of cryptography and cats,” he explained to an overflowing audience of hackers at the HOPE conference (http://vimeo.com/45830811) on Saturday, July 14.
The site, crypto.cat, has a chunky, 8-bit sensibility, with a big-eyed binary cat in the corner (http://vimeo.com/38439169). The visitor has the option to name, then enter a chat. There’s some explanatory text, but little else. It’s deceptively simple for a web app that can save lives, subvert governments and frustrate marketers. But as little as two years ago such a site was considered to be likely impossible to code.
Cryptocat is an encrypted web-based chat. It’s the first chat client in the browser to allow anyone to use end-to-end encryption to communicate without the problems of SSL, the standard way browsers do crypto, or mucking about with downloading and installing other software. For Kobeissi, that means non-technical people anywhere in the world can talk without fear of online snooping from corporations, criminals or governments.http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2012/07/crypto-cat-encryption-for-all/
By Quinn Norton (http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/author/quinnnorton/)
http://www.wired.com/images_blogs/threatlevel/2012/07/nadim-660x450.jpg (http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2012/07/crypto-cat-encryption-for-all/nadim/)
Nadim Kobeissi, creator of Crypto.cat, spoke in mid-July at the HOPE conference, held at New York’s Hotel Pennsylvania every two years. Credit: Quinn Norton/Wired
Twenty-one-year-old college student Nadim Kobeissi is from Canada, Lebanon and the internet.
He is the creator of Cryptocat (https://crypto.cat/), a project “to combine my love of cryptography and cats,” he explained to an overflowing audience of hackers at the HOPE conference (http://vimeo.com/45830811) on Saturday, July 14.
The site, crypto.cat, has a chunky, 8-bit sensibility, with a big-eyed binary cat in the corner (http://vimeo.com/38439169). The visitor has the option to name, then enter a chat. There’s some explanatory text, but little else. It’s deceptively simple for a web app that can save lives, subvert governments and frustrate marketers. But as little as two years ago such a site was considered to be likely impossible to code.
Cryptocat is an encrypted web-based chat. It’s the first chat client in the browser to allow anyone to use end-to-end encryption to communicate without the problems of SSL, the standard way browsers do crypto, or mucking about with downloading and installing other software. For Kobeissi, that means non-technical people anywhere in the world can talk without fear of online snooping from corporations, criminals or governments.http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2012/07/crypto-cat-encryption-for-all/