There are many ways to contribute to SecureDrop, and we welcome your help! By contributing to this project, you agree to abide by our Code of Conduct.
SecureDrop is an open-source whistleblower submission system that media organizations can use to securely accept documents from, and communicate with anonymous sources. It was originally created by the late Aaron Swartz and is currently managed by the Freedom of the Press Foundation.
SecureDrop's end user documentation is hosted at https://docs.securedrop.org. It is maintained in a standalone repository: https://github.com/freedomofpress/securedrop-docs.
By default, the documentation describes the most recent SecureDrop release. This is known as the stable version and is recommended for end users (Sources, Journalists, or Administrators). The latest documentation is automatically built from the most recent commit to the SecureDrop documentation repository. It is most useful for developers and contributors to the project. You can switch between versions of the documentation by using the toolbar in the bottom left corner of the Read the Docs screen.
Developer documentation can be found at https://developers.securedrop.org/, maintained in https://github.com/freedomofpress/securedrop-dev-docs/.
If you're here because you want to report an issue in SecureDrop, please observe the following protocol to do so responsibly:
- If you want to report a security issue, please use our bug bounty hosted by Bugcrowd.
- If filing the issue does not impact security, just create a GitHub Issue.
See the Installation Guide.
See our contribution page.
Ensure you have Docker installed and:
make dev
This will start the source interface on 127.0.0.1:8080
and the journalist interface on 127.0.0.1:8081
. The credentials to login are printed in the Terminal. To login to the journalist interface, you must also generate a two-factor code.
SecureDrop is open source and released under the GNU Affero General Public License v3.
The wordlist we use to generate source passphrases come from various sources:
- en.txt is based off a new Diceware wordlist from the EFF.
- fr.txt is based off Matthieu Weber's translated diceware list and the French word list found in trezor/python-mnemonic (MIT licensed).
A huge thank you to all SecureDrop contributors! You can see just code and documentation contributors in the "Contributors" tab on GitHub, and you can see code, documentation and translation contributors together here. Thanks to our friends at PyUp for sponsoring a subscription to their Python security database.