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Jami (software)
Distributed multimedia communications platform From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Jami is a free and open-source telecommunications platform for peer-to-peer and distributed videotelephony, videoconferencing, and voice calls. It also has instant messaging, file transfer, support for calls to landline and mobile telephones (over traditional telephone networks), and other features.
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Jami is free and open-source software released under the GNU GPL-3.0-or-later.[13] Jami is developed by Savoir-faire Linux (SFL) and community contributors.
Jami is available for most desktop and mobile platforms. Internal builds of Jami for web browsers are yet to be publicly released.
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History
In December 2004, Savoir-faire Linux launched the SFLPhone project.
In November 2009, CIO magazine listed SFLphone among the top five open-source VoIP softphones to watch.[14]
In May 2015, SFLphone was renamed to Ring.[15]
In November 2016, Ring was integrated into the GNU project. Ring is free and open-source software released under the GNU General Public License version 3 or later.[citation needed]
In December 2018, Ring was renamed to Jami to avoid confusion with commercial products also using the English term Ring.[16][17]
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Use and design
Jami is an open-source voice over IP, videotelephony, and instant messaging platform. In 2025, TechRadar listed it as one alternative to Skype following its discontinuation.[13]
By default, Jami uses an OpenDHT node maintained by Savoir-faire Linux to join the network when the user connects for the first time. However, the application gives users the choice to run this through their own server.[18]
Jami is available on various desktop (GNU/Linux, macOS, and Microsoft Windows), mobile (Android and iOS), television (Android TV), and server platforms.[citation needed] Jami for Web,[19] allowing access with a web browser, has not yet been released to the public.[20]
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Features
Available features depend on both the Jami client and the platform used.[21]
- Operates on a peer-to-peer basis without a central server. Jami can be used on local networks without an Internet connection.[16]
- End-to-end encryption used for chat, video, and voice.[21][22]
- SIP-compatible with OpenDHT support.[23][21][24]
- Instant messaging.[21]
- Call recording.[23][16]
- Audio and video calls with multi-party audio[23] and video conferencing.[25][21][26]
- Multiple[23] audio codecs supported: G.711u, G.711a, GSM, Speex (8, 16, 32 kHz), Opus, and G.722 (silence detection supported with Speex).
Release history
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See also
References
External links
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