Syme, a social network that promised Ello-like privacy, has gone dark
A social network that attracted
attention last year for its strong privacy features has quietly disappeared off
the Web.
The death of Syme, which
appears to have gone offline some time in the past few months, is testimony
that even in a booming market like social networking, there will be winners and
losers.
Syme allowed its users to chat
and share content over a fully encrypted network. The site launched not long after Edward Snowden blew the
lid off the U.S. government's aggressive surveillance tactics, which created an
appetite for greater security and privacy on the Web.
"The website is no longer
running," Syme co-founder Louis Mullie said Friday in an email. He and his
fellow co-founders didn't respond to messages seeking further details.
The site appears to have been
operating on Aug. 29, judging by a snapshot taken by the Internet Archive's Wayback
Machine.
Syme's most recent tweet was
in April, when it said it had addressed the Internet's Heartbleed security bug.
Syme may be eventually revived
in some form, as the open-source code to the platform was released on Github.
"We hope the project does live on," Mullie said in his email.
Syme had Facebook-like
elements, allowing people to post status updates, photos and files, but all
content was encrypted in the browser before it left a computer. Mobile apps for
iOS and Android were planned but apparently never released.
Its downfall is a shame, in
part because enabling end-to-end encryption for consumers is a tough challenge,
and one the company hoped to achieve.
"The overarching goal of
Syme is to make encryption accessible and easy to use for people who aren't
geeks or aren't hackers or who aren't cryptography experts," said co-founder Jonathan Hershon late last year.
Meanwhile new social networks
are still springing up. Ello, the flavor of the week right now in alternative social
media, promises greater privacy than
Facebook
, but doesn't have Syme's full
encryption.
Ello is still a small
operation, run by a guy in Vermont who also owns a bike company.
Syme was operated by three
students at McGill University in Montreal; perhaps their studies got in the
way.
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