Public domain federated communications server. Provides a feature rich ActivityPub and Nomad communication node.
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Klaus Weidenbach d0361582b0 Correcting reported Doxygen syntax warnings.
Fixed wrong Doxygen syntax and add some of the available FIXME to
Doxygen documentation.
Updated Doxygen configuration to add also all capital letter tags.
Adding some more Doxygen documentation.
2015-03-29 22:23:00 +02:00
app local_user => local_channel 2015-01-28 20:56:04 -08:00
assets generate the correct service permalink 2015-02-08 18:31:51 -08:00
doc add channel_lastpost timestamp to help optimise some outrageously expensive queries. 2015-03-26 19:55:52 -07:00
images bring some styling back to the colorbox and improve the event preview ability 2015-02-09 18:58:43 -08:00
include Correcting reported Doxygen syntax warnings. 2015-03-29 22:23:00 +02:00
install add channel_lastpost timestamp to help optimise some outrageously expensive queries. 2015-03-26 19:55:52 -07:00
library move bootbox out of bootstrap 2015-03-17 23:16:22 +01:00
mod Correcting reported Doxygen syntax warnings. 2015-03-29 22:23:00 +02:00
tests rev update, fix autoname test "random" failure 2012-04-26 01:33:41 -07:00
util Correcting reported Doxygen syntax warnings. 2015-03-29 22:23:00 +02:00
vendor PostgreSQL support initial commit 2014-11-13 12:21:58 -08:00
view Make sure long words (channel addresses, homepages) on the vcard are not on top of the content to the right. 2015-03-29 00:38:47 +01:00
.gitattributes Required for github/Windows 2012-06-14 18:39:48 +10:00
.gitignore add reddress to profile - but all is not as it seems. Copy to clipboard is blocked because it isn't really a reddress and won't work if you copy it and try and use it somewhere. We should really convert the symbol back to '@' on copy and allow it to be copied, but this isn't as easy as it sounds and is left as an exercise for the community. If we just allow it to be copied we'll get a lot of bugs that making friends doesn't work. It does, but that isn't a legitimate reddress and even if we made allowances for it, Diaspora and Friendica and other webfinger based services wouldn't and would just say it can't be found or it's an illegal address. So if we block copy we'll just get bugs that it can't be copied. Eventually somebody will see this checkin and take it on themselves to figure out how to fix the address when copied to clipboard and then allow it to be copied. And there will be joy. 2015-03-07 23:35:56 -08:00
.htaccess cherry pick pull request #544 2014-07-24 19:07:04 -07:00
boot.php Correcting reported Doxygen syntax warnings. 2015-03-29 22:23:00 +02:00
index.php automated warning after a few days if poller is dead 2015-03-02 18:02:06 -08:00
LICENSE the yearly license update 2015-01-07 18:03:36 -08:00
README.md context check 2014-10-12 21:59:22 -07:00
version.inc issue #941 2015-03-28 14:53:00 -07:00

the Red Matrix

One of the traditional problems with independent publishing on the internet has always been the fact that independent publishers often operate as isolated islands within their own website, and spend most of their resources attracting visitors. The rise of corporate providers and social networking services alleviated many of these problems; however centralisation has led to a situation where your content is no longer under your direct control. It is shared fully with corporate advertisers and governments, but ironically you are now often asked to pay money to ensure that your friends can see it. What if you could have advantages of scale and connections that centralisation typically offers whilst maintaining independent control over your own web presence?

The RedMatrix is a super network created from a huge number of smaller independent and autonomous websites - which are linked together into a cooperative publishing and social platform. It consists of an open source webapp providing a complete multi-user decentralised publishing, sharing, and communications system - known as a "hub". Each hub provides communications (private messaging, chat, blogging, forums, and social networking), along with media management (photos, events, files, web pages, shareable apps) for its members; all in a feature-rich platform. These hubs automatically reach out and connect with each other and the rest of the matrix. Privacy and content ownership always remain under the direct personal control of the individual; and permission to access any item can be granted or denied to anybody in the entire matrix.

What makes the RedMatrix unique is what we call "magic authentication" - which is based on our groundbreaking work in decentralised identity services. No other platform provides this ability. Within the matrix the boundaries between different hubs are blurred or seemingly non-existent. Identity in the matrix is considered transient and potentially nomadic. "Who you are" has nothing to do with "what computer you're connected to", and website content can adapt itself according to who is viewing it. You have the ability to "clone" your identity to other hubs; which allows you to continue to communicate with your friends seamlessly if your primary hub is ever disabled (temporarily or permanently).

The RedMatrix is ideal for communities of any size, from private individuals and families to online forums, business websites, and organisations. It can be used by anybody who has communications or web content that they wish to share, but where they desire complete control of whom they share it with.

The Red Matrix is free and open source distributed under the MIT license.

For a list of public hubs see redmatrix.me/pubsites. For installation instructions see install/INSTALL.txt