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Jitsi privacy
Jitsi privacy







jitsi privacy

So we constituted the “Jitsi Club” and created this project to share experiences among self-hosting Jitsi users and define a standard deployment for a private, self-hosted, GDPR-compliant videoconferencing system. Moreover, as to privacy compliance concerns, the relevant information to make informed decisions as Data Controller (in the sense of the GDPR) is fragmented, too, and in some cases it is rather imprecise. On the other hand, Jitsi is made of different sub-components and some of them (Prosody) are third party components, thus the relevant documentation is fragmented accordingly one has to search and put together different pieces of documentation from different sources to achieve the desired result (set up a private videoconferencing system to host one’s own private meetings).

#JITSI PRIVACY MANUAL#

So, installing Jitsi is easy, but its practical use requires manual setting. Moreover, some Jitsi default audio/video settings are not optimal for hosting meetings with more than 10 participants. Offering a Jitsi server accessible to anyone without authentication may imply legal and security issues that cannot be handled (and it would not make sense they were handled) by small organizations and individuals, and in any case it does not fit the needs of who is willing to set up a private videoconferencing system to host their own private meetings. On the one hand, the default Jitsi deployment (official debian packages) is intended for supplying a videoconferencing system open to anyone in the Internet, without registration.ĭoes process (and store in logs) browsing data and conversation metadata andĭoes not implement E2E encryption (unless under certain specific use conditions) – so audio/video streams flow unencrypted within the server, This project by the Jitsi Club includes documentation and scripts to fill gaps and put together some sparse pieces of the official documentation, in order to enable people to implement a self-hosted videoconferencing solution that can compete with mainstream proprietary solutions and that is privacy compliant, too. It is just a WIP proposal, open to discussion, on how a Jitsi server can be quickly (and legally) deployed in order to host one’s own private videomeetings – “one” meaning a teacher, a school, a professional, a business providing videomeeting services for their own students, colleagues or clients, in the spirit of user-owned cloud.

jitsi privacy

DISCLAIMER: this is not legal nor technical advice.









Jitsi privacy