keysync 0.2-2 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

keysync (0.2-2) unstable; urgency=low


  * fix issue where keysync-gui crashed on start

 -- Hans-Christoph Steiner <email address hidden>  Thu, 14 Nov 2013 16:00:57 -0500

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Hans-Christoph Steiner
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Hans-Christoph Steiner
Architectures:
all
Section:
misc
Urgency:
Low Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Trusty release universe misc

Builds

Trusty: [FULLYBUILT] i386

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
keysync_0.2-2.dsc 2.0 KiB c72623beb86408246a515f786670d14c7b34e1ca365b83e3e6294889f627fec8
keysync_0.2.orig.tar.gz 1.5 MiB 33e6cafa2bc8979ad0c5e655aa14ffb076bf1e233ba466155ee93ad1b3343e03
keysync_0.2-2.debian.tar.gz 3.0 KiB f024c091d22ce0301d0dbdcef643134a39d80d13482b9a1e6ee7acad300b0a48

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

keysync: Syncs OTR identities between the different chat programs

 There are many chat apps that support OTR encryption for verifying messages.
 Many use multiple chat apps, including one for desktop and another for
 mobile, or one for Mac OS X and another for GNU/Linux or Windows. The trust
 relationships are only stored locally in the app in a format that is specific
 to that app. Switching between all of them means that you have to manage
 your trust relationships for each app that you use.
 .
 KeySync addresses this problem by allowing you to sync your OTR identity and
 trust relationships between multiple apps. It currently works with
 ChatSecure on Android, and Pidgin, Adium, and Jitsi on desktop. This project
 is for converting the various OTR file formats between each other.
 Currently, KeySync is focused on the two major OTR implementations: libotr
 and otr4j, but it is modular enough to allow adding support for any OTR
 implementation.