peermesh
Start a fully meshed network by passing on the generated link and share files peer-to-peer and end-to-end encrypted powered by WebRTC!
- Works fully in the browser using
WebRTC. - Mesh swarms can be started by opening the site. A "mesh URL" is generated to be passed around.
- The mesh URL contains a password. All files mesh will be sent
end-to-end encrypted. - Swarms can be joined by opening the mesh URL.
- Swarm form fully meshed networks (n:n) using
webrtc-swarm. - WebRTC signaling data is exchanged via
signalhub. - Swarm URLs can be bookmarked and reused.
trust on first use: encryption keys - You see when the source code changes because of
hyperboot.trust on first use: source code
Files will *not* be propagated among peers. The peers that initates a transfer will send the file to every connected peer individually.
Combining trust on first use both for encryption keys *and* source code will help you defeat Sauron!
Installation
git clone https://github.com/pguth/peermesh.git
cd peermesh
npm install
# You need a signaling server running:
npm install -g signalhub
signalhub listen -p 7000
# Now serve peermesh:
npm run build # and then open `public/index.html` in your browser or
npm start # to start the development server on `http://localhost:9966`Related
peertransferPeertransfer is a (1:n) WebRTC based file transfer tool. Compared topeermeshit encodes a authentication code into the "sharing URL" that is passed around and will not initiate WebRTC signaling if the code is missing or wrong.

Formed in 2009, the Archive Team (not to be confused with the archive.org Archive-It Team) is a rogue archivist collective dedicated to saving copies of rapidly dying or deleted websites for the sake of history and digital heritage. The group is 100% composed of volunteers and interested parties, and has expanded into a large amount of related projects for saving online and digital history.

