Element (software)

Decentralised chat and collaboration software From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Element (software)

Element (formerly Riot and Vector[13]) is a free and open-source software instant messaging client implementing the Matrix protocol.[14]

Quick Facts Other names, Original author(s) ...
Element
Other names
  • Riot (2016–2020)
  • Vector[1][2] (2016)
Original author(s)Vector Creations Limited[1]
Developer(s)New Vector Limited[3] trading as Element
Initial releaseJuly 2016 (Beta)
Stable release(s)
Android1.6.32[4]  / 18 February 2025
iOS1.11.25[5]  / 4 February 2025
Linux1.11.92[6]  / 11 February 2025
macOS1.11.92[6]  / 11 February 2025
Windows1.11.92[6]  / 11 February 2025
Web1.11.92[7]  / 11 February 2025
Repository
Written inJavaScript, Objective-C, Swift, Java, Kotlin
PlatformWindows, macOS, Linux, Android, iOS, Web platform
Available in25 languages[8]
List of languages
Basque, Bengali, Bulgarian, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Czech, Dutch, English (UK), English (US), Esperanto, Finnish, French, German, Hungarian, Italian, Korean, Latvian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Slovak, Spanish, Swedish
TypeVoIP communications, instant messaging, Videoconferences,[9] social media, and other App Integrations
LicenseAGPLv3 only[10]
GPLv3 only[11]
Element Commercial License[12]
Websiteelement.io
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Element supports end-to-end encryption,[15] private and public groups, sharing of files between users, voice and video calls, and other collaborative features with help of bots and widgets. It is available as a web application that can be accessed through any modern web browser, as desktop apps for Windows, Mac, and Linux, and as a mobile app for Android and iOS.[9][16] Element changed its license from Apache 2.0 to AGPLv3 and GPLv3 with CLA and with a separate Element Commercial License.[17][18]

History

Element was originally known as Vector when it was released from beta[1][2] in 2016.[19] The app was renamed to Riot in September of the same year.[20]

Thumb
Logo of Riot from 2019 to 2020.

In 2016 the first implementation of the Matrix end-to-end encryption was implemented and rolled out as a beta to users.[21] In May 2020, the developers announced enabling end-to-end encryption by default in Riot for new non-public conversations.[22]

In April 2019, a new application was released on the Google Play Store in response to cryptographic keys used to sign the Riot Android app being compromised.[23]

In July 2020, Riot was renamed to Element.[24]

In January 2021, Element was briefly suspended from Google Play Store in response to a report of user-submitted abusive content on Element's default server, matrix.org.[25][26] Element staff rectified the issue and the app was brought back to the Play Store.[26]

In May 2023, India's government banned 14 messaging apps, including Element. The ban was enacted on the recommendation of the Ministry of Home Affairs, citing terrorism in Jammu and Kashmir as the main cause.[27]

Technology

Element is built with the Matrix React SDK,[28] which is a React-based software development kit to ease the development of Matrix clients. Element is reliant on web technologies and uses Electron for bundling the app for Windows, macOS and Linux. The Android and iOS clients are developed and distributed with their respective platform tools.

On Android the app is available both in the Google Play Store[29] and the free-software only F-Droid[30] Archives, with minor modifications. For instance, the F-Droid version does not contain the proprietary Google Cloud Messaging plug-in.[31]

Features

Element is able to bridge other communications into the app via Matrix,[14] including IRC, Slack, Telegram, Jitsi Meet and others.[32][33] Also, it integrates voice and video peer-to-peer and group chats via WebRTC.

Element supports end-to-end encryption (E2EE) of both one-to-one and group chats.[9][33]

Reception

Media compared Element to Slack,[1][2] WhatsApp[2] and other instant messaging clients.[34]

In 2017, German computer magazine Golem.de called Element (then Riot) and Matrix server "mature" and "feature-rich", but criticized its key authentication at the time to be not user-friendly for communicatees owning multiple devices. A co-founder of the project, Matthew Hodgson, assured the key verification process was a "placeholder" solution to work on.[34] In 2020, Element added key cross-signing to make the verification process simpler, and enabled end-to-end encryption by default.[22]

See also

References

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