The Internet has grown increasingly centralized over the past two decades, such that a handful of companies now effectively control the Internet infrastructure. The public square is privately owned, threatening freedom of speech and democracy.
Freenet is a software platform that makes it easy to create decentralized alternatives to today's centralized tech companies. These decentralized apps will be easy to use, scalable, and secured through cryptography.
To learn more about Freenet as a developer read The User Manual. For an introduction to Freenet watch Ian's talk and Q&A - YouTube / Vimeo.
Freenet is currently under development. Using our development guide, developers can experiment with building decentralized applications using our SDK and testing them locally.
Examples of what can be built on Freenet include:
- Decentralized email (with a gateway to legacy email via the @freenet.org domain)
- Decentralized microblogging (think Twitter or Facebook)
- Instant Messaging (Whatsapp, Signal)
- Online Store (Amazon)
- Discussion (Reddit, HN)
- Video discovery (Youtube, TikTok)
- Search (Google, Bing)
All will be completely decentralized, scalable, and cryptographically secure. We want Freenet to be useful out-of-the-box, so we plan to provide reference implementations for some or all of these.
Freenet is a decentralized key-value database. It uses the same small world routing algorithm as the original Freenet design, but each key is a cryptographic contract implemented in Web Assembly, and the value associated with each contract is called its state. The role of the cryptographic contract is to specify what state is allowed for this contract, and how the state is modified.
A very simple contract might require that the state is a list of messages, each signed with a specific cryptographic keypair. The state can be updated to add new messages if appropriately signed. Something like this could serve as the basis for a blog or Twitter feed.
Freenet is implemented in Rust and will be available across all major operating systems, desktop and mobile.
Locutus was the working title used for this successor to the original Freenet,
in March 2023 it was renamed to "Freenet", this repository was
renamed from locutus
to freenet-core
in September 2023.
The original Freenet codebase is now called Hyphanet. It is still actively developed by the same maintainers as before, and is available here.
We're in #freenet-locutus on Matrix. If you have questions you can also ask here.
Many developers are active in r/freenet, but remember that Reddit engages in political and ideological censorship so don't make this your only point of contact with us.
In addition to creating the excellent libp2p which we use for low-level transport, Protocol Labs has generously supported our work with a grant.
FUTO has generously awarded Freenet two Legendary Grants to support Freenet development.
If you are in a position to fund our continued efforts please contact us on twitter or by email at ian at freenet dot org.
This project is licensed under either of:
- Apache License, Version 2.0, (LICENSE-APACHE or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)