Changes for page About
Last modified by Zenna Elfen on 2026/01/06 12:25
From version 30.1
edited by Zenna Elfen
on 2026/01/06 12:19
on 2026/01/06 12:19
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To version 31.1
edited by Zenna Elfen
on 2026/01/06 12:23
on 2026/01/06 12:23
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... ... @@ -15,24 +15,26 @@ 15 15 16 16 17 17 18 + 19 + 18 18 (% class="col-xs-12 col-sm-7" %) 19 19 ((( 20 20 == Core principles of Peer-for-Peer Networks == 21 21 22 22 23 -=== Mutual-Aid === 25 +=== 1. Mutual-Aid === 24 24 25 25 Mutual-aid networks mean that they aim to be collaborative, through open-source licensing models, avoiding lock-ins such as walled gardens and enable interoperability between networks, communities and protocols. 26 26 27 -=== Peer-2-Peer === 29 +=== 2. Peer-2-Peer === 28 28 29 29 Peer-to-peer networks let computers talk directly to each other instead of going through a central boss server. Every participant both gives and receives information. This makes the system more flexible, harder to break, and easier to grow. 30 30 31 -=== Local-First === 33 +=== 3. Local-First === 32 32 33 33 Local-first communication networks keep your data on your own device or nearby computers first, instead of sending everything to a big central server. The system still works even when the internet is slow or completely gone. Sharing with others happens later, when a connection is available. 34 34 35 -=== Routing Agnostic === 37 +=== 4. Routing Agnostic === 36 36 37 37 Routing-agnostic networks don’t care //how// or //when// messages travel, only that they eventually get there. Information can wait, take different paths, or hop between devices until a connection appears. This means the network keeps working even during outages or bad connections. 38 38 )))