GhostWire Protocol Aims to Build Censorship-Resistant Mesh Communication Stack
A project called GhostWire has been developed as an open communication protocol designed to function without centralized servers, targeting activists, journalists, and users in authoritarian environments. The protocol operates across multiple transport layers — including Bluetooth, LoRa, Tor, and standard internet — automatically switching between them if one fails. All messages are end-to-end encrypted by default, with post-quantum cryptography built into the core stack rather than added as an optional feature. GhostWire also includes coercion-resistance tools such as a duress PIN, panic mode, and a dead man's switch for high-risk users. Built in Rust for memory safety on constrained hardware, the project positions itself not as a replacement for tools like Signal or Briar, but as a foundational protocol layer others can build upon.
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