FireChat
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Developer(s) | Open Garden |
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Platform | Android, iOS |
Type | mesh networking |
License | Proprietary |
Website | opengarden |
FireChat is a proprietary mobile app, developed by Open Garden, which uses wireless mesh networking to enable smartphones to connect via Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, or Apple’s Multipeer Connectivity Framework without an internet connection by connecting peer-to-peer.[1]
Though it was not designed with the purpose in mind, FireChat has been used as a communication tool in some civil protests.
History
The app was first introduced in March 2014 for iPhones,[2] followed on April 3 by a version for Android devices.[3]
In July 2015, FireChat introduced private messaging. Until then, it had only been possible to post messages to public chatrooms.[4]
Usage
FireChat first became popular in 2014 in Iraq following government restrictions on internet use,[5][6] and thereafter during the Hong Kong protests.[7][8] In 2015, FireChat was also promoted by protesters during the 2015 Ecuadorian protests.[9] On September 11, 2015, during the pro-independence demonstration called Free Way to the Catalan Republic, FireChat was used 131,000 times.[10]
In January 2016, students protested at the University of Hyderabad, India, following the suicide of a PhD student named Rohith Vemula.[11] Some students were reported to have used Firechat after the university shut down its Wi-Fi.[12]
Security
In June 2014, Firechat's developers told Wired that "[p]eople need to understand that this is not a tool to communicate anything that would put them in a harmful situation if it were to be discovered by somebody who's hostile ... It was not meant for secure or private communications."[13]
As of July 2015, FireChat claims to use end-to-end encryption to protect its one-to-one private messages.[4]
See also
- Mesh network applications
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References
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External links
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- Pages with reference errors
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- Official website not in Wikidata
- 2014 software
- Communication software
- IOS software
- Android (operating system) software
- Wireless networking
- Radio resource management
- Politics and technology
- Internet-related activism
- Mesh networking
- Mobile computer stubs
- Telecommunications stubs