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Awesome distributed, decentralized, p2p apps or tools Awesome

Note: Links marked with "☠️ " are old and probably no longer maintained.

Applications

  • Aether: P2P ephemeral public communities. Open source, self-governing
  • Agregore: A minimalistic web browser that supports multiple peer-to-peer protocols and is extensible with standard WebExtensions.
  • airpaste ☠️: A 1-1 network pipe that auto discovers other peers using mdns. Can send text or files.
  • Airshare: CLI tool and module for transferring data between 2 machines in a local network, P2P, using Multicast-DNS. Works completely offline.
  • AKASHA: A Next-Generation Social Media Network. Powered by the Ethereum world computer. Embedded into the Inter-Planetary File System.
  • Beaker: Experimental browser. It adds new technologies for Peer-to-Peer applications while staying compatible with the rest of the Web.
  • Berty: secure peer-to-peer messaging app that works with or without internet access, cellular data or trust in the network.
  • Bitmessage: P2P communications protocol used to send encrypted messages to another person or to many subscribers.
  • Cabal: P2P community offline-first chat platform.
  • CacheP2P: highly distributed cache platform based on WebTorrent and runs only in the browser.
  • Cactus Comments: Federated comment system for the open web built on Matrix.
  • croc: Easily and securely send files and folders from one computer to another in command line.
  • Cryptor: Overlay P2P network that values your privacy and anonymity above all else. Packages and some clients included.
  • Dat desktop app: Decentralized data tool for distributing data small and large.
  • Databag: Self-hosted lightweight federated messenger for the decentralized web. Lightweight, public-private key based identity, end-to-end encryption.
  • DB3 Network: Decentralized Firebase Firestore Alternative
  • Deltachat: Delta Chat is like Telegram or Whatsapp but without the tracking or central control. It doesn't have their own servers but uses the most massive and diverse open messaging system ever: the existing e-mail server network. Chat with anyone if you know their e-mail address, no need for them to install DeltaChat, all you need is a standard e-mail account.
  • Demonsaw: Secure and anonymous information sharing application that makes security simple and gives you back control of your data.
  • Diaspora: A privacy-aware, distributed, open source social network. Main pod is at Diasp.eu.
  • Dropub ☠️: Share files for free on the internet. It's like Dropbox meets BitTorrent.
  • Element (formerly Riot): Collaboration client for the web. Chat, VOIP video, file transfer, end-to-end crypto.
  • Ferment ☠️ ☠️: P2P audio publishing and streaming application. Like SoundCloud but decentralized. Built using SSB + Webtorrent.
  • FileLove: Minimal p2p file transfer right in the browser, using WebTorrent.
  • FilePizza ☠️: Free peer-to-peer file transfers in your browser.
  • Fred: Freenet REference Daemon. Also: freenetproject.org
  • Friendica: Decentralised communications platform that integrates social communication. Connect effortlessly to a federated communications network of several thousand servers, with more than half a million users. Directly connect to anyone on Friendica, Mastodon, Diaspora, GnuSocial, Pleroma, or Hubzilla, regardless of where each user profile is hosted.
  • Friends ☠️: P2P chat powered by the web. This project is alpha quality.
  • Galacteek: Browser and dapps platform for the distributed web.
  • Handshake: Decentralized, permissionless naming protocol compatible with DNS where every peer is validating and in charge of managing the root zone with the goal of creating an alternative to existing Certificate Authorities.
  • Hardbin: Encrypted pastebin using IPFS.
  • Hidden Lake: Anonymous network with theoretical provability to a global observer. It is based on the problem of queues.
  • Hubzilla: General purpose platform for creating interconnected websites featuring a decentralized identity, communications, and permissions framework built using common webserver technology.
  • Hyperpad: Peer-to-peer collaborative text editor.
  • I2P: Anonymous network, exposing a simple layer that applications can use to anonymously and securely send messages to each other.
  • instant.io: Streaming file transfer over WebTorrent (torrents on the web).
  • IPFS bin ☠️: Pastebin application for sharing code and text documents to other people.
  • IPFS Desktop: A native application to run your own IPFS Node.
  • ipfs-chat: Terminal-based, secure chatrooms using IPFS. Works over both LAN and internet (includes NAT traversal). Supports private-messaging and file/directory sharing.
  • ipfs-pinner: A toolkit helps upload files to IPFS pinning services such as Infura, Pinata, NFT.Storage and Web3.Storage.
  • iWant ☠️: Commandline tool for searching and downloading files in LAN network, without any central server.
  • Jami: Free and universal communication platform which preserves the user's privacy and freedoms. Desktop and mobile apps for text messaging, video and audio calls, file transfer, video conferencing.
  • Keet: Peer to peer video & chat. Private & encrypted. Share huge files instantly.
  • LCVPN: Light decentralized VPN in golang.
  • LF: Fully decentralized fully replicated key/value store. Fully decentralized means anyone can run a node without obtaining special permission, and all nodes are effectively equal. Fully replicated means every node stores all data.
  • MaidSafe: Decentralized internet and app infrastructure which rewards users for participating in the network.
  • Manyverse: A social network off the grid. Scuttlebutt for mobile.
  • Mastodon: Social networking, back in your hands. Follow friends, discover new ones. Publish anything you want: links, pictures, text, video. A platform that is community-owned and ad-free.
  • Meshbird: Meshbird enables distributed private networking across geographically dispersed datacenters.
  • Meshenger: Voice/Video Android phone App that works on the local LAN and does not need Internet access/servers/accounts.
  • Mobilizon: A federated tool that helps you find, create and organise events.
  • Neocities: Geocities-style websites, but decentralized.
  • Netsukuku: Netsukuku is an alternative to the internet; it will have all of the features of the internet, such as websites, instant messaging, file transfers, DNS, etc. It functions as a mesh network or a p2p net system that generates and sustains itself autonomously. It is designed to handle an unlimited number of nodes with minimal CPU and memory resources.
  • NewNode: Decentralized Content Distribution Network (dCDN).
  • NNTPChan: NNTP based decentralized imageboard.
  • Noms ☠️: Versioned, forkable, syncable decentralized database, philosophically descendant from the Git version control system. Nobody is working on this right now.
  • norcal: P2P command-line calendar in Node.js. Can sync, link, embed, and edit offline.
  • Nostr - A decentralized social network with a chance of working. A simple, open protocol that enables a truly censorship-resistant and global social network (https://nostr.com/)
  • nuTorrent ☠️: A Pure Javascript BitTorrent Client. Built with Electron and React.
  • OnionShare: Open source tool that lets you securely and anonymously share a file of any size.
  • Open Bazaar: Decentralized network for P2P commerce online - using Bitcoin - that has no fees and no restrictions.
  • Orbit: Distributed, serverless, peer-to-peer chat application on IPFS.
  • ORC ☠️: Onion Routed Cloud, a decentralized, anonymous, file storage platform. It uses the Tor network.
  • Orion: Easy to Use, Inter Planetary File System (IPFS) desktop client.
  • Patchwork: Decentralized messaging and sharing app built on top of Secure Scuttlebutt (SSB). Another alternative interface is Patchbay.
  • Peertransfer ☠️: Send a file p2p and e2e encrypted using nothing but your browser.
  • PeerTube: Video streaming platform using BitTorrent directly in the web browser, with WebTorrent and Angular. Demo server at peertube.cpy.re.
  • Philes: A simple IPFS-powered decentralized notepad app.
  • Pleroma: Federated social networking server built on open protocols. It is compatible with GNU Social, Mastodon, and many other ActivityPub and OStatus implementations.
  • Pollen: A decentralized messaging service that functions without any internet or mesh connection. Written in Python.
  • Qaul: Internet independent wireless mesh communication App. Uses interlinked P2P mesh via BLE, Wifi & Internet-overlay.
  • reep.io ☠️: Transfer files directly to another browser, your peer will be able to download the file directly from you.
  • Retroshare: Encrypted connections between you and your friends to create a network of computers, and provides various distributed services on top of it: forums, channels, chat, mail...
  • Ricochet: Different approach to instant messaging that doesn’t trust anyone in protecting your privacy. It uses the Tor network.
  • Roll-Call: Free and reliable audio calls for everyone w/ browser P2P.
  • SecuShare: A research project. Consider that it basically consists of a new Internet stack combined with a full-fledged distributed scalability alternative to cloud technology. Source code: https://gnunet.org/git/gnunet.git
  • ShareDrop ☠️: Clone of Apple AirDrop service. Allows transferring files directly between devices, without having to upload them to any server first.
  • SimpleX chat: A decentralized terminal-based chat (a mobile app coming soon) with a focus on users’ privacy. It doesn't use any global user identities (not even random IDs), supports groups and sending files.
  • SocialHome: Federated personal profile with social networking functionality. Users can create rich content using Markdown and even HTML/JS/CSS. All content can be pinned to the user profile and all content will federate to contacts in the federated social web.
  • Steemit: Blockchain-based social media platform where anyone can earn rewards.
  • Storj: Blockchain-based, end-to-end encrypted, distributed object storage, where only you have access to your data.
  • Syncthing-GTK: GUI for Syncthing - a continuous file synchronization program.
  • TheDistributedBay ☠️: P2P rewrite of the Open Bay/Pirate Bay. It uses a completely distributed protocol to share entries between numerous nodes. This makes it nearly impossible to take down by seizure of servers. Each node contains a complete copy, and any changes are propagated through the network.
  • Ticktack ☠: Decentralized social platform for people to share knowledge and exchange value, with P2P messaging encrypted feature. Built on top of Secure Scuttlebutt (SSB).
  • Tox: Instant messaging application, without central servers. The system is distributed, peer-to-peer, and end-to-end encrypted.
  • twtxt: Decentralized microblogging platform "for hackers" based on text files. The user is "followed" and "mentioned" by referencing the URL to their twtxt.txt file and a nickname.
  • Vdo.Ninja: 100% free; no downloads; no personal data collection; no sign-in, cutting edge Peer-to-Peer forwarding technology that offers privacy and ultra-low latency
  • webcat ☠️: P2P pipe across the web using webrtc that uses Github private/public key for authentication and a signalhub for discovery. Can send text or files.
  • WebTorrent Desktop: WebTorrent Desktop is for streaming torrents. It connects to both BitTorrent and WebTorrent peers.
  • YaCy: Free distributed search engine, built on principles of P2P networks.
  • ZeroNet: Open, free and uncensorable websites, using Bitcoin cryptography and BitTorrent network. Uncensored, no hosting costs, always accessible. communities with auditable moderation and mod elections.

Other

  • ArcBlock: ArcBlock is a decentralized developer platform that simplifies the development of DApps, DLT and Blockchains.
  • m-ld: A software library enabling distributed applications to read and write shared information consistently with zero latency, using Semantic Web technology and CRDTs (Conflict-Free Replicated Data Types).
  • Solid: Solid was created by the inventor of the World Wide Web, Sir Tim Berners-Lee. Solid is a specification that lets people store their data securely in decentralized data stores called Pods. Pods are like secure personal web servers for your data. For developer resources, see Developer Resources. For a listing of some Solid applications, see Solid Applications.
  • Blockstack: The new decentralized internet. Platform for application development with built in decentralized DNS.
  • Cryptosphere: Open-source P2P web application platform for decentralized, privacy-preserving software which keeps users in control of their own content.
  • okTurtles: DNSChain = Secure Blockchain Access and BlockchainID = decentralized web login.
  • Blockply: Blockply is a collection of the most interesting & outstanding Blockchain projects.
  • DataToken: A decentralized access control system for off-chain data sharing and monetization. Its vision is to make the data flows more transparent, by returning data ownership to its owners while maintaining the computability of data.
  • Hyphanet: Hyphanet is a peer-to-peer platform for censorship-resistant and privacy-respecting publishing and communication. The original Freenet.
  • GNUnet: GNUnet is a network protocol stack for building secure, distributed, and privacy-preserving applications. The Internet of tomorrow needs GNUnet today.
  • Gun: A cybersecurity protocol for syncing decentralized graph data; GUN is an ecosystem of tools that let you build community run and encrypted applications - like an Open Source Firebase or a Decentralized Dropbox.

Related Lists


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awesome-decentralized's Issues

add ArcBlock

please add ArcBlock

A fully decentralized developer platform to build, run and deploy websites, DApps, and Blockchains
www.arcblock.io

Federated vs fully decentralized, protocol vs app

I really appreciate this list. Please accept a humble suggestion.

The apps listed implement protocols that are federated (mastodon, matrix/element) or fully decentralized (no servers) like scuttlebutt (will make another issue for this protocol), retroshare, tox (I think - exploring).

There is actually a range, e.g. SMTP (email) can be fully decentralized (https://fedoramagazine.org/decentralize-common-fedora-apps-cjdns/), federated (normal email domains), or centralized (everyone uses gmail which refuses to talk to any other domains).

Would you consider tagging each app with a rough estimate of decentralization - from 5, fully decentralized to 1 (facebook). 3 would be federated (Element). 4 would include Signal (P2P calls and messaging but centralized directory). Or use your own scale. Note that there can be fully decentralized implementations of federated protocols (P2PMatrix), so the decentralization score goes with the app, not the protocol.

Finally, all of the apps implement a protocol. In some cases there is only one fully developed app (e.g. retroshare - but there are alternative implementations). In others, like Matrix, you list only Element - but there are dozens of mature apps that interoperate with Element and also implement the Matrix protocol. There are at least 2 server implementations (synapse, dendrite).

So I could suggest adding Nheko to your list, but it should be somehow grouped with Element as a Matrix client.

It does make sense to emphasize one app for each protocol as the "reference app". Not necessarily the most efficient, but the most feature complete and popular. So Element would represent Matrix as the most popular client.

So that is a lot to ask. Each app listed should include "decentralization score" and protocol. It would be nice to list protocols separately as well. If the protocol is not clearly named, just use the name of the reference app in scare quotes.

add projects: usenet, freenet, gnunet, secushare, gun

usenet

https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/The_World_of_Peer-to-Peer_(P2P)/Networks_and_Protocols#Usenet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_News_Transfer_Protocol # NNTP protocol

not really "decentralized"?

usenet is somewhat popular in germany for filesharing, next to one-click-hosting, because people are afraid of cease-and-desist requests (abmahnungen) for bittorrent seeding (though its usually safe to ignore such requests)

Usenet is the original peer to peer file-sharing application. It was originally developed to make use of UUCP (Unix to Unix Copy) to synchronize two computers' message queues. Usenet stores each article in an individual file and each newsgroup in its own directory. Synchronizing two peers is as simple as synchronizing selected directories in two disparate filesystems.

Usenet was created with the assumption that everyone would receive, store and forward the same news. This assumption greatly simplified development to the point where a peer was able to connect to any other peer in order to get news. The fragmentation of Usenet into myriad newsgroups allowed it to scale while preserving its basic architecture. 'Every node stores all news' became 'every node stores all news in newsgroups it subscribes to'.

Of all other peer-to-peer protocols, Usenet is closest to Freenet since all nodes are absolutely equal and global maps of the network are not kept by any subset of nodes. Unlike Freenet, which works by recursive pulling of a requested object along a linear chain of peers, Usenet works by recursive pushing of all news to their immediate neighbors into a tree.

nntpchan

https://github.com/majestrate/nntpchan

NNTPChan (previously known as overchan) is a decentralized imageboard that uses the NNTP protocol (network-news transfer protocol) to synchronize content between many different servers. It utilizes cryptographically signed posts to perform optional/opt-in decentralized moderation.

freenet

https://freenetproject.org/
https://github.com/hyphanet/fred
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freenet
https://geti2p.net/en/comparison/freenet
https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/The_World_of_Peer-to-Peer_(P2P)/Networks_and_Protocols/Other_Software_Implementations#Freenet

distributed data store

Freenet is a peer-to-peer platform for censorship-resistant, anonymous communication. It uses a decentralized distributed data store to keep and deliver information, and has a suite of free software for publishing and communicating on the Web without fear of censorship.[4][5]: 151  Both Freenet and some of its associated tools were originally designed by Ian Clarke, who defined Freenet's goal as providing freedom of speech on the Internet with strong anonymity protection.[6][7]

The distributed data store of Freenet is used by many third-party programs and plugins to provide microblogging and media sharing,[8] anonymous and decentralised version tracking,[9] blogging,[10] a generic web of trust for decentralized spam resistance,[11] Shoeshop for using Freenet over sneakernet,[12] and many more.

gnunet

https://www.gnunet.org/en/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNUnet
https://www.reddit.com/r/ipfs/comments/duqg8e/gnunet_seems_very_similar_to_ipfs_but_they_also/
https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/The_World_of_Peer-to-Peer_(P2P)/Networks_and_Protocols/Other_Software_Implementations#GNUnet

framework of distributed protocols

GNUnet is a software framework for decentralized, peer-to-peer networking and an official GNU package. The framework offers link encryption, peer discovery, resource allocation, communication over many transports (such as TCP, UDP, HTTP, HTTPS, WLAN and Bluetooth) and various basic peer-to-peer algorithms for routing, multicast and network size estimation.[5][6]

GNUnet's basic network topology is that of a mesh network. GNUnet includes a distributed hash table (DHT) which is a randomized variant of Kademlia that can still efficiently route in small-world networks. GNUnet offers a "F2F topology" option for restricting connections to only the users' trusted friends. The users' friends' own friends (and so on) can then indirectly exchange files with the users' computer, never using its IP address directly.

GNUnet uses Uniform resource identifiers (not approved by IANA, although an application has been made).[when?] GNUnet URIs consist of two major parts: the module and the module specific identifier. A GNUnet URI is of form gnunet://module/identifier where module is the module name and identifier is a module specific string.

secushare

https://secushare.org/

apps based on gnunet

Imagine Facebook, Whatsapp, Gmail and Skype rolled into one, without the centralized surveillance and control. Crazy? Well, it hasn't been tried before, at least not our way. So let's give it a try.
secushare employs GNUnet for end-to-end encryption and anonymizing mesh routing (because it has a more suitable architecture than Tor or I2P) and applies PSYC on top (because it performs better than XMPP, JSON or OStatus) to create a distributed social graph. Together, these technologies allow for distributed private social networking including more straightforward and secure e-mail, chat, exchange of content and a private web. It could even work out as a safer choice for the Internet of Things.

The resulting new Internet enjoys the speed of servers that help without knowing much about us, the authenticity of social relationships between users without becoming transparent, the privacy of advanced obfuscation without becoming cumbersome or a threat to society. This way, we can become independent of centralized infrastructure and expect that only the designated recipients can read our communications. Read more about it in the introduction.

https://secushare.org/#source

Currently most components of secushare are integrated with GNUnet. The design is described on the protocol page.

netsukuku

https://github.com/Netsukuku/netsukuku

old project. sounds similar to gnunet

Netsukuku is an alternative to the internet, It will have all of the features of the internet, Such as websites, Instant messaging, File transfers, DNS, Etc. It functions as a mesh network or a p2p net system that generates and sustains itself autonomously. It is designed to handle an unlimited number of nodes with minimal CPU and memory resources.

Thanks to this feature it can be easily used to build a worldwide distributed, anonymous and decentralised network, separated from the Internet, without the support of any servers, ISPs or authorities.

https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/The_World_of_Peer-to-Peer_(P2P)/Networks_and_Protocols/Other_Software_Implementations#Netsukuku

Netsukuku (http://netsukuku.freaknet.org/) is a p2p (in mesh) network system, originally developed by FreakNet MediaLab, that can generate and sustain itself autonomously. It is designed to handle an unlimited number of nodes with minimal CPU and memory resources. It seems that it can be easily used to build a worldwide distributed, anonymous decentralized network, above the Internet, without the support of any servers, ISPs or authority controls. Netsukuku replaces the network level 3 of the OSI model with another routing protocol. An open source Python implementation was finished in October 2007.

Netsukuku is based on a very simple idea: extending the concept of Wi-Fi mesh networks to a global scale, although not necessarily using that medium. With the use of specialized routing protocols and algorithms, the current Wi-Fi technologies can be exploited to allow the formation of a global P2P wireless network, where every peer (node) is connected to its neighbors.

gun

https://github.com/amark/gun

An open source cybersecurity protocol for syncing decentralized graph data.

GUN is an ecosystem of tools that let you build community run and encrypted applications - like an Open Source Firebase or a Decentralized Dropbox.

The Internet Archive and 100s of other apps run GUN in-production. GUN was also part of Twitter's bluesky initiative!

  • Multiplayer by default with realtime p2p state synchronization!
  • Graph data lets you use key/value, tables, documents, videos, & more!
  • Local-first, offline, and decentralized with end-to-end encryption.

Decentralized alternatives to Zoom, Reddit, Instagram, Slack, YouTube, Stripe, Wikipedia, Facebook Horizon and more have already pushed terabytes of daily P2P traffic on GUN.

Scuttlebutt

Some devs living on boats needed a social media app that didn't depend on being constantly connected to the internet. So they developed the Secure Scuttlebutt protocol, or SSB. A "scuttlebutt" is the water cooler on a ship.

SSB is fully decentralized, works offline, and synchronizes content when connected, or upon arrival of human or avian courier. (It is transport independent.) Enthusiasts have built and deployed solar powered embedded "pubs", automated nodes to store and exchange content with SSB apps near enough for Wifi.

The reference app is/was "Patchwork" - 5, fully decentralized. But there are a number of apps, my favorite being Patchfoo (which is a web app - 4, client with separate decentralized server).

SSB is popular enough that some orgs, like BBC, are beginning to use it for advertising. People have to actually want to "follow" your ads - but this is not a problem for BBC (or superbowl commercials).

Deltachat

Rather than build a new protocol like the Matrix project, Deltachat builds a rich messaging app around one of the oldest protocols, SMTP. A benefit is that you can talk to anyone with an email. Adding a tiny local SMTP server (e.g. opensmtpd) makes this app fully decentralized, but it should be listed as federated - because it doesn't include a server out of the box.

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