Collaborative office suite, end-to-end encrypted and open-source.
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Updated
May 27, 2024 - JavaScript
End-to-end encryption (E2EE) is a system of communication where only the communicating users, servers, or applications can read the messages sent between each other, regardless of the number of hops or nodes between the messenger and the recipient.
Collaborative office suite, end-to-end encrypted and open-source.
Fully open source, End to End Encrypted alternative to Google Photos and Apple Photos
♾ Infisical is the open-source secret management platform: Sync secrets across your team/infrastructure and prevent secret leaks.
Orchestrate end-to-end encryption, cryptographic identities, mutual authentication, and authorization policies between distributed applications – at massive scale.
📱 Wire for iOS (iPhone and iPad)
A new way to build apps with distributed state.
(WIP) 🔐 A modern decentralized and private messenger with end-to-end encryption.
Cryptographically Secure Messaging App created with ALS, E2EE, and Digital Signature
Cryptographically Secure Messaging App created with ALS, E2EE, and Digital Signature
fast & lightweight self-hosted messenger
Keybase Go Library, Client, Service, OS X, iOS, Android, Electron
🔐 Server API to support End-to-End Encryption
Secure peer-to-peer chat that is serverless, decentralized, and ephemeral
E2E Secure Messaging Platform
End-to-End encrypted application secrets and configuration management for developers.
Mobile client for minimalistic cloud hosting provider, Blazed Cloud
OpenTDF client for browsers
VULNRΞPO - Free vulnerability report generator and repository, end-to-end encrypted! Templates of issues, CWE, CVE, MITRE ATT&CK, PCI DSS, issues import Nmap/Nessus/Burp/OpenVAS/Bugcrowd/Trivy, Jira export, TXT/JSON/MARKDOWN/HTML/PDF report, attachments, automatic changelog, statistics, vulnerability management, bug bounty, pentest reporting, etc..
OpenTDF Platform monorepo enabling the development and integration of _forever control_ of data into new and existing applications. The concept of forever control stems from an increasingly common concept known as zero trust.