Install party to set up #DeltaChat servers, created several local test servers, and promoted it.
This was our community's final in-person gathering of the year for free software enthusiasts, held privately.
We designated the year 1404 (in the Persian calendar) as the year for promoting free software culture.
Based on this, we organized various events and conferences to introduce this culture, and similarly pursued diverse promotional approaches to amplify the voice of free software.
The adoption of free software has had positive impacts in Iran.
Now, with a record of 500 active Delta Chat servers during Iran's internet blackout period, we made an effort to hold this final gathering.
We have named the new year as the year for promoting decentralized #free_software tools and will continue to pursue it.
May the new year in a free Iran allow us to both host events introducing books like #Ada and #Zangemann, and promote free, decentralized tools.

Delta Chat
in reply to Abbas Davarpanah عباس داورپناه • • •User
in reply to Delta Chat • • •Delta Chat
in reply to User • • •Delta Chat: FAQ
delta.chatUser
in reply to Delta Chat • • •Delta Chat
in reply to User • • •Delta Chat: Delta Chat, decentralized secure messenger
delta.chatUser
in reply to Delta Chat • • •D:\side\>
in reply to User • • •@delta I figure @qyahxm is translating from Russian? "прямая секретность" is a silly attempt at word-for-word translation of "forward secrecy" that entirely loses its meaning but basically the answer is "yeah, very recently with Autocrypt 2": delta.chat/en/help#pfs
There is a reason Wikipedia in Russian doesn't translate the term in the title: ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perfect_… – wherever the term is used, there seems to also be knowledge of its English counterpart and there's just no good translation for it.
Perfect forward secrecy — Википедия
Contributors to Wikimedia projects (Фонд Викимедиа)Delta Chat
in reply to D:\side\> • • •Autocrypt v2 - Post-Quantum and Reliable Deletion
autocrypt2.orgD:\side\>
in reply to Delta Chat • • •@delta I'm a decently-informed-but-ultimately-casual observer in the security parts, but the name "forward secrecy" makes more sense to me for what it defines: "secrecy" of the message after it's "forwarded" (sent anywhere else in addition to its destinations — which would include things like wiretapping and late retrieval, which aren't typically seen as forms of forwarding). It makes sense to me mechanically.
I'm not on board with "reliable deletion" because information cannot be reliably deleted without direct control over every single device involved. What you're doing in ACv2 is preserving *secrecy* — rendering retrieval of older messages useless. I can understand how it can be seen as a form of deletion from a user's perspective and making sense to the user is a fair rationale. I just have doubts this choice of words is going to be any easier to explain.
I was explaining the same phenomenon wrt. post deletions on Fediverse literally yesterday
@qyahxm
Heiko
in reply to D:\side\> • • •@dside the term en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forward_… is unrelated to the concept of "forwarding a message".
It's a very technical term that clearly has gotten popularized. However, its precise meaning is subtle and not intuitively understood, even as the term is widely recognized as some kind of desirable property.
property of secure communication protocols in which compromise of long-term keys does not compromise past session keys
Contributors to Wikimedia projects (Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.)D:\side\>
in reply to Heiko • • •The author might not have meant it to be related in this way, but there is a sensible explanation for the etymology which I just provided. Honestly, I have no clue if it's a popular interpretation. I assume that it probably isn't.
So the idea behind the new term is to escape the existing association as something desirable by stopping the use of it altogether, which'll look to the public eye as the admission of not having it?
It's… a plan, I guess. It might backfire IMO, but I assume you looked into it much deeper than I did.
Delta Chat
in reply to D:\side\> • • •Autocrypt v2 - Post-Quantum and Reliable Deletion
autocrypt2.orgD:\side\>
in reply to Delta Chat • • •@delta yeah, I caught that bit of the intention. The goal is understandable. I'm just not sure the solution will work towards it.
I disagree with this being a more direct expression (admittedly, with my atypically wide interpretation of "forwarding") of what it's trying to say and it's most certainly at a massive disadvantage in adoption. The adoption of a new term for an existing concept is an uphill battle against an entrenched bit of natural language, so to speak. My concern is that it might end up causing more trouble than it's worth.
I'll refrain from commenting further until I actually watch the FOSDEM talk on AC2. Good news: for all the hosting providers Russia has been banning en masse lately autocrypt2's website is perfectly accessible at this time
@hko