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Gossip

Gossip is a desktop client for NOSTR

Nostr is an open social media protocol empowering lots of software such as this client. The experience is kind of like Twitter except that you control your own account, and you can post to many different independent places called "relays". People are finding many additional uses for NOSTR that go far beyond micro-blogging or chatting, but this client is focused on those.

Nostr stands for "Notes and Other Stuff Transmitted by Relays."

Installing

See instructions for Build from Source.

With Release Builds

  • Debian: See the releases area for a file named something like gossip-VERSION-ARCH.deb
  • Any Linux: See the releases area for a file named something like gossip.VERSION.AppImage
  • Microsoft Windows: See the releases area for a file named something like gossip.VERSION.msi
  • MacOS: See the releases area for a file named something like gossip-VERSION-Darwin-arm64.dmg or gossip-VERSION-Darwin-x86_64.dmg

With Package Managers

Packaging status

With pacman on Arch Linux: gossip or gossip-git or gossip-bin on the AUR

With homebrew on MacOS or Linux: brew install gossip from homebrew-core, or for more options brew install nostorg/nostr/gossip from homebrew-nostr

With scoop on Microsoft Windows: scoop install extras/gossip from scoop extras bucket.

Points of Difference

The following features make gossip different than most other nostr clients so far:

  • Desktop: Gossip is designed to run on desktop computers, and runs on Windows, MacOS and Linux.
  • Gossip Model: The Gossip Model was named after this client, because gossip never used a simple list of relays. From day one it tried to find posts of people that you follow wherever they are most likely to be, based on those people's relay lists as well as half a dozen other heuristics. Today multiple clients use a similar model, focused around (NIP-65). Gossip connects to all relays necessary to cover everybody you follow, while also trying to listen to the minimum number of relays necessary to do that (considering that there is overlap, and that people generally post to multiple relays). It also dynamically adjusts to relays being down or disconnecting.
  • Secure Key Handling: Gossip handles private keys as securely as reasonable (short of hardware tokens), keeping them encrypted under a passphrase on disk, requiring that passphrase on startup, and zeroing memory before freeing it. This shouldn't really be a point of difference but few other clients bother.
  • Avoids Browser-Tech: Gossip avoids web technologies (other than HTTP GET and WebSockets which are necessary for nostr). The web stack is huge, complex, and probably full of undiscovered vulnerabilities, presenting as a huge attack surface. This includes Javascript, the very many and ever-expanding set of web technologies built into browsers and accessible via javascript, and even HTML parsing, rendering, and CSS. This isn't just a pedantic or theoretical concern; people have already had their private key stolen from other nostr clients. We use simple OpenGL-style rendering instead. It's not as pretty but it gets the job done.
  • Performant: Gossip aims towards being highly performant, using the LMDB database, the rust language, and coding architectures with performance always in mind. Unless you have quite old hardware, the network speed will probably be your bottleneck.
  • High user control: Gossip has (at the time of writing) 64 different settings. When the right value is uncertain, I pick a reasonable default and give the user the mechanism to change it.
  • Privacy Options: in case someone wishes to remain secret they should use Gossip over Tor - I recommend using QubesOS do to this. But you could use Whonix or even Tails. Don't just do it on your normal OS, because on a plain OS sometimes data leaks around Tor (things like DNS lookups). Gossip supports using native TLS certificates so you can configure trust for .onion sites. Gossip provides options to support privacy usage such as not loading avatars, not loading images, not necessarily sharing who you follow, etc.

Screenshots

Gossip Screenshot, Default Light Theme Gossip Screenshot, Default Dark Theme

nostr features supported

βœ… = Fully Supported 🟩 = Partly Supported ⬜ = Not Supported (but might be in the future) ⬛ = Not Applicable

  • βœ… NIP-01 - Basic protocol flow description
  • βœ… NIP-02 - Contact List and Petnames
  • ⬜ NIP-03 - OpenTimestamps Attestations for Events
  • βœ… NIP-04 - Encrypted Direct Message (Read Only is implemented)
  • βœ… NIP-05 - Mapping Nostr keys to DNS-based internet identifiers
  • ⬜ NIP-06 - Basic key derivation from mnemonic seed phrase
  • ⬛ NIP-07 - window.nostr capability for web browsers (NOT APPLICABLE)
  • βœ… NIP-08 - Handling Mentions
  • βœ… NIP-09 - Event Deletion
  • βœ… NIP-10 - Conventions for clients' use of e and p tags in text events
  • βœ… NIP-11 - Relay Information Document
  • βœ… NIP-13 - Proof of Work
  • βœ… NIP-14 - Subject tag in text events
  • ⬜ NIP-15 - Nostr Marketplace (for resilient marketplaces)
  • βœ… NIP-17 - Private Direct Messages
  • βœ… NIP-18 - Reposts
  • βœ… NIP-19 - bech32-encoded entities
  • βœ… NIP-21 - nostr: URL scheme
  • 🟩 NIP-23 - Long-form Content (viewing, but not creating)
  • 🟩 NIP-24 - Extra metadata fields and tags (Shown in profile, not treated specially)
  • βœ… NIP-25 - Reactions
  • βœ… NIP-26 - Delegated Event Signing
  • βœ… NIP-27 - Text Note References
  • ⬜ NIP-28 - Public Chat
  • ⬜ NIP-29 - Relay-based Groups
  • ⬜ NIP-30 - Custom Emoji
  • βœ… NIP-31 - Dealing with Unknown Events
  • ⬜ NIP-32 - Labeling
  • ⬜ NIP-34 - git stuff
  • ⬜ NIP-35 - Torrents
  • βœ… NIP-36 - Sensitive Content
  • ⬜ NIP-38 - User Statuses
  • ⬜ NIP-39 - External Identities in Profiles
  • ⬜ NIP-40 - Expiration Timestamp
  • βœ… NIP-42 - Authentication of clients to relays
  • βœ… NIP-44 - Versioned Encryption
  • ⬜ NIP-45 - Counting results
  • 🟩 NIP-46 - Nostr Connect (works as signer, not as client, auto-approving at present)
  • ⬜ NIP-47 - Wallet Connect
  • βœ… NIP-48 - Proxy Tags
  • βœ… NIP-49 - Private Key Encryption
  • ⬜ NIP-50 - Search Capability
  • 🟩 NIP-51 - Lists (we use some, not all)
  • ⬜ NIP-52 - Calendar Events
  • ⬜ NIP-53 - Live Activities
  • ⬜ NIP-54 - Wiki
  • ⬛ NIP-55 - Android Signer Application
  • ⬜ NIP-56 - Reporting
  • βœ… NIP-57 - Lightning Zaps
  • ⬜ NIP-58 - Badges
  • βœ… NIP-59 - Gift Wrap
  • βœ… NIP-65 - Relay List Metadata
  • ⬜ NIP-70 - Protected Events
  • ⬜ NIP-72 - Moderated Communities
  • ⬜ NIP-75 - Zap Goals
  • ⬜ NIP-78 - Application-specific data
  • ⬜ NIP-84 - Highlights
  • ⬜ NIP-89 - Recommended Application Handlers
  • ⬜ NIP-90 - Data Vending Machines
  • ⬜ NIP-92 - Media Attachments
  • ⬜ NIP-94 - File Metadata
  • ⬜ NIP-96 - HTTP File Storage Integration
  • ⬜ NIP-98 - HTTP Auth
  • ⬜ NIP-99 - Classified Listings

Content Moderation and Curation

Gossip provides multiple methods for you to moderate and curate the content that you see. Some of these mechanisms leverage the work of other people such as community moderators, friends, and relay operators. Others put you in charge, but as such you will be seeing the content in order to moderate it so they don't completely insulate you from the content. Here are the mechanisms available in gossip for content moderation and feed curation.

  1. No global feed and no algorithm - Gossip has no global feed. So right from the start you are not subjected to everything that is out there. Feeds are comprised entirely of posts from people that you choose to follow. Replies to posts, on the other hand, can come from anywhere. Therefore there is still a need for moderation.
  2. Lists - You can define lists of people and view only what those people have posted.
  3. Muting - You can mute individual people. You can share this mute list with other clients that you use.
  4. Thread Dismissal - You can dismiss a post and all the replies to it (however, this is temporary until client restart).
  5. Content Warnings - Gossip shows content warnings of posts that have them, and you must approve to see the content. You can also place content warnings on any content that you post.
  6. Spam Filtering Script - Gossip provides a hook to filter posts via a script that you can program to do whatever you want.
  7. SpamSafe Relay Designation - When the SpamSafe setting is enabled, notes from unknown persons are only fetched from relays that you have marked as SpamSafe.

Showing relay-global feeds on relays marked SpamSafe is a possibility for the future.

In the future I intend for gossip to support one of the multiple competing standards for labelling and reporting of content (the options currently are NIP-32, NIP-56, and NIP-72), but none of these are defined well enough to be useful yet IMHO. I look forward to a time when you can subscribe to a set of moderators that you trust.

Command Line Usage

Gossip is a GUI desktop program, but it also outputs a lot of messages to the console as it runs. I recommend you keep the console open and pay some attention to errors or other odd behavior that may become apparent from the console messages.

Gossip has a lot of command line commands for tweaking things or extracting bits of information from its database. See docs/COMMANDS.md.

Building from Source

Step 0 - Possible Reset of Master Branch

If when you pull gossip it doesn't pull cleanly, I may have done a rare force-push. Run these commands to reset your master branch:

git fetch
git reset --hard origin/master

Step 1 - Install Rust

If you don't already have rust installed, follow the guidance at rust-lang.org.

Step 2 - Install some dependencies

Most dependencies are probably already installed in your base operating system. Here are a few that sometimes aren't:

  • build essentials like gcc and make (debian: "build-essential")
  • cmake (debian: "cmake")
  • pkg-config (debian: "pkg-config")
  • openssl (debian: "libssl-dev") (this is only needed if not compiling with feature "rustls-tls")
  • fontconfig (debian: "libfontconfig1-dev")
  • ffmpeg support (debian: libavutil-dev libavformat-dev libavfilter-dev libavdevice-dev libxext-dev libclang-dev) (this is only needed if compiling with feature "video-ffmpeg")

macOS

a. Install rust with rust-up: https://rustup.rs/ b. Install homebrew if you don't have it yet https://brew.sh/ c. Install these dependencies:

brew install cmake sdl2 pkg-config ffmpeg

Step 3 - Clone this Repository

git clone https://github.com/mikedilger/gossip

Step 4 - Compile

cd gossip
cargo build --release

The output will be a binary executable in target/release/gossip

This binary should be portable to similar systems with similar hardware and operating system.

If you want a binary optimized for your exact processor with the newest CPU features enabled, and all gossip features enabled, do something more like this (for exact features to use, see the next section):

RUSTFLAGS="-C target-cpu=native --cfg tokio_unstable" cargo build --features=lang-cjk,video-ffmpeg --release

Everything gossip needs (fonts, icons) is baked into this executable. It doesn't need to find assets. So you can move the "gossip" binary and run it from anywhere.

To make the binary smaller,

strip gossip

Step 5 - Do it all again

The master branch changes quickly. When you want to update, do it all again, something like this:

git pull
cargo build --release
strip ./target/release/gossip
./target/release/gossip

Compile Features

TLS

Gossip has three options for TLS support:

  1. Use rust-code and compiled in root certificates from webpki (feature 'rustls-tls')
  2. Use rust-code, but use your system's root certificates (feature 'rustls-tls-native', this is the default)
  3. Use your system's code and your system's root certificates (feature 'native-tls')

Rust's TLS code is thought to be more secure than your systems TLS code (e.g. OpenSSL). But it is very finnicky. In particular:

  • It will not accept self-signed CA certificates. If you have these on your system, it won't run at all.
  • Gossip will fail to negotiate SSL with servers that don't have any strong ciphersuites. This is a feature, but not one that everybody wants.
  • Gossip may not compile on hardware that the ring crypto library does not yet support.

Language Support

Chinese, Japanese and Korean character sets

Gossip by default does not include the CJK font because it is larger than all other languages put together, and most gossip users don't recognize those characters. If you do recognize such characters, you can compile in that font with:

  --features=lang-cjk

Other Non-Latin languages

There are so many of these (172) that it becomes a real pain to add them all. But if you need one, please ask (open an issue) and I'll add it for you.

Video Playback

You will need to install sdl2 (follow the instructions in the readme) and ffmpeg on your system.

Compile with

  --features=video-ffmpeg

Troubleshooting

See docs/TROUBLESHOOTING.md.

Technology Involved

  • Rust Language
  • egui Rust GUI framework
  • LMDB
  • Tungstenite websocket library
  • Tokio async task runtime
  • Serde serialization/deserialization
  • Speedy serialization/deserialization
  • Many others

License

MIT license (LICENSE MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)

Contribution

All contributions welcome, please check the development guidelines before starting to code.

Please join Gossip Telegram Channel.

Anyone interested in replacing the GUI with something much better, or keeping it as egui but making it much better, would be greatly appreciated. The project was split into two crates (lib and bin) to make it easier to build a different UI onto the backend.

Any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, shall be licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.

On Nostr

The official gossip account

nprofile1qqsrjerj9rhamu30sjnuudk3zxeh3njl852mssqng7z4up9jfj8yupqpzamhxue69uhhyetvv9ujumn0wd68ytnfdenx7tcpz4mhxue69uhkummnw3ezummcw3ezuer9wchszxmhwden5te0dehhxarj9ekkj6m9v35kcem9wghxxmmd9uq3xamnwvaz7tm0venxx6rpd9hzuur4vghsz8nhwden5te0dehhxarj94c82c3wwajkcmr0wfjx2u3wdejhgtcsfx2xk

npub189j8y280mhezlp98ecmdzydn0r8970g4hpqpx3u9tcztynywfczqqr3tg8

Mike Dilger

nprofile1qqswuyd9ml6qcxd92h6pleptfrcqucvvjy39vg4wx7mv9wm8kakyujgpzamhxue69uhhyetvv9ujumn0wd68ytnfdenx7tcprpmhxue69uhkzapwdehhxarjwahhy6mn9e3k7mf0qyt8wumn8ghj7etyv4hzumn0wd68ytnvv9hxgtcprdmhxue69uhkummnw3ezumtfddjkg6tvvajhytnrdakj7qgnwaehxw309ahkvenrdpskjm3wwp6kytcpremhxue69uhkummnw3ez6ur4vgh8wetvd3hhyer9wghxuet59uq32amnwvaz7tmwdaehgu3wdau8gu3wv3jhvtct8l34m

npub1acg6thl5psv62405rljzkj8spesceyfz2c32udakc2ak0dmvfeyse9p35c hex: ee11a5dff40c19a555f41fe42b48f00e618c91225622ae37b6c2bb67b76c4e49

You can also my NIP-05 address of [email protected] which will also hook you up with the relays I post to.

I'd prefer if you trusted [email protected] higher than my public key at this point in time since key management is still pretty bad. That is the inverse of the normal recommendation, but my private key has not been treated very carefully as I never intended it to be my long-term key pair (it just became that over time). Also, I fully intend to rollover my keys once gossip supports the key-rollover NIP, whatever that is (or will be).

You can tip me at my Bitcoin Lighting address: [email protected] == lnurl1dp68gurn8ghj7ampd3kx2ar0veekzar0wd5xjtnrdakj7tnhv4kxctttdehhwm30d3h82unvwqhkgetrv4h8gcn4dccnxv563ep

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