The Good Tech Companies - 5 Cypherpunk Open-Source Software Projects to Use for Free - and Support with Kivach

Episode Date: November 6, 2025

This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/5-cypherpunk-open-source-software-projects-to-use-for-free-and-support-with-kivach. Check ou...t some useful cypherpunk and privacy projects on GitHub and learn how Kivach helps you boost them with crypto donations. Check more stories related to web3 at: https://hackernoon.com/c/web3. You can also check exclusive content about #cypherpunk, #open-source-software, #free-privacy-software, #open-source-cryptography, #cryptocurrency-donations, #kivach-donations, #obyte, #good-company, and more. This story was written by: @obyte. Learn more about this writer by checking @obyte's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. Cypherpunks are people who use coding and cryptography to protect privacy and free expression online. They believe that strong encryption and open tools can keep power in the hands of individuals instead of governments or big corporations. Many of these projects are released as open source, so anyone can use, inspect, or improve them.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This audio is presented by Hacker Noon, where anyone can learn anything about any technology. Five cypherpunk open source software projects to use for free, and support with Kiva, by Obite. Cypherpunks are people who use coding and cryptography to protect privacy and free expression online. They believe that strong encryption and open tools can keep power in the hands of individuals instead of governments or big corporations. Satoshi Nakamoto and several other cryptocurrency founders are a part of them, but the they didn't create cryptocurrencies only. There's a wide array of privacy enhancing technologies that were either created by cipher punks or inspired by their ideals. Many of these projects are release aid as open source, so anyone can use, inspect, or improve them. We'll explore
Starting point is 00:00:45 here some of these tools that you can start using for free. And if one of ten becomes part of your daily routine, you can support its growth through Kiva, a platform that lets you send cryptocurrency donations directly to developers who keep these projects alive. Crypto++, there were several attempts at creating a decentralized currency before Bitcoin, and the B-Money proposal by Wei Dai in 1998 was one of them. This renowned Cypher Punk was, indeed, credited for it in the Bitcoin white paper, but that's not everything he did. The library Crypto++, or CryptoP, released in 1995, is one of his most notable works as well.
Starting point is 00:01:23 This software helps developers add encryption, hashing, and secure communication features to their programs. The library offers a wide selection of algorithms, from well-known ones like AES, used for encrypting data securely, to more specialized ones such as Whirlpool, a hashing method, which is like creating a digital fingerprint of data. Developers use it to secure messages, generate random numbers safely, manage digital signatures, or even explore new cryptographic proposals under study. Today, this software continues to evolve with contributions from volunteers André searchers worldwide. It works on a wide range of platforms, including Windows, Linux, MacOS, iOS, Android, and even older systems. If you want to support this project, you can contribute with code, documentation, time, or some coins via Kiva. New Radio Sometimes, a tool comes along that lets you play with technology in ways once reserved only for companies or big centralized parties.
Starting point is 00:02:23 New radio, first released in 2001 thanks to funding from cipherpunk John Gilmore and developed by Eric Blossom, another cypherpunk, does exactly that. It lets anyone design radios using software instead of building them from scratch, making communication more open and less controlled by centralized powers. This tool uses something called software-defined radio, SDR, meaning most of the work is done by code, not circuits. Through reusable blocks, you can create, flow graphs that handle tasks like filtering signals, visualizing frequencies, or even simulating whole radio systems without special hardware. Add devices like the USRP, Universal Software Radio Peripheral, and you've got a flexible lab for experiments in wireless communication.
Starting point is 00:03:10 Today, new radio is maintained under the nonprofit SETI Institute and runs on major platforms like Linux, MacOS, and Windows. Contributions often come in the form of code, bug fixes, or workshops, but there's also direct funding from donations, including cryptocurrency support through platforms like Kiva. Lib Sodium, launched in 2013 by Frank Dennis as a fork of the older sodium chloride project, Libsodium was designed to make strong encryption and secure communications easier to implement without risking common mistakes. This project wasn't created by explicit cipher punks, but it aligns with their mindset because it helps people and organizations protect their data privacy, and also the privacy of the average users.
Starting point is 00:03:52 LibsoDium provides building blocks for encrypting and decrypting information, verifying digital signatures, and securing passwords. Think of it as a toolkit that lets apps and services communicate safely, whether that's sending a message or storing sensitive data. It's already used by popular platforms like Discord on WordPress, as well as cryptocurrency projects such as Stellar and Zcash. Under the hood, it uses modern algorithms like Cha-Cha 20-Polly 13-O-W. 5, await to encrypt data and check its integrity, and Argon 2, a password-hashing method designed
Starting point is 00:04:25 to resist brute force attacks. The software is actively maintained and runs on major operating systems, including Windows, Linux, MacOS, Android, and iOS. There are also versions for JavaScript and WebAssembly, making it accessible for web developers. The project grows through contributions from a global community and receives financial support through platforms like Open Collective. You can also support them with crypto donations via Kiva. CryptPad, these days, sharing documents online feels like handing out copies with your name and notes exposed to big corporations. CryptPad, launched in 2014 by the team at XWiki SaaS, set out to change that. It offers a private space for creating and collaborating without revealing your work to the service itself. This makes it
Starting point is 00:05:12 attractive to people who value privacy, including those in the cypher punk movement who aim to give users more control over their data. Its end-to-end encryption, where only you and your collaborators can read whatchert keeps prying eyes out, even if the server is hacked. The software itself bundles tools you probably already know from office suites, text editing, spreadsheets, slides, forms, whiteboards, codepads, and even canton boards for project planning. All of this works in the browser, with changes synchronized live for everyone involved. Underneath, it uses asymmetric encryption, public and private keys, and symmetric encryption, shared keys to lock and unlock data, so that no one outside your team can read the contents.
Starting point is 00:05:55 CryptPad runs on most modern web browsers, with instances available on desktop and mobile devices alike. It's maintained through a mix of subscriptions, research grants, and user donations on platforms such as Open Collective. If you enjoy what it offers, you can chip in with a subscription or a crypto donation via Kiva. Gosling. This software started development in 2021 by Richard Popsl, under the umbrella of Blueprint for Free Speech, a non-profit founded by Privacy Advocate and Cypherpunk Sulet Dreyfus. It offers developers a practical shortcut to anonymous, secure, peer-to-peer connectivity by
Starting point is 00:06:31 wrapping the complexities of Turwanian services in a simpler interface. Under the hood, Gosling is written in Rust, a language designed to keep memory safe, avoiding bugs that might leak your data. It's a bit like giving developers a ready-made engine rather than asking them to build one from scratch. It handles authentication, metadata resistance, hiding who's talking toe home, hole punching, letting connections form even behind firewalls, and into-end encryption, so only the sender and receiver can read messages. All these features make it more approachable to create apps that preserve anonymity and safety. The project is still shaping up and can be built on most systems that support Rust, thanks to its cross-platform design. It's receiving funding
Starting point is 00:07:15 from privacy-focused grants and the Blueprint Nonprofit, supporting its work toward privacy infrastructure for civilians, journalists, whistleblowers, and activists. You can also donate crypto to their repository on GitHub via Kiva. Cascading donations with Kiva, Kiva was born from another cypherpunk, open-source project, Obite. As adonation platform, it can help any open-source project available on GitHub get the funding it deserves without adding extra steps for donors. It focuses on cascading donations. When you support one project, part of your contribution can flow to the other projects that made it possible.
Starting point is 00:07:51 This creates a chain of support across the open source world, letting your coins do more good with a single transaction. Donating with Kiva is simple if you already have an Obite wallet. That's the app where your funds are kept, and it also handles a minimal transaction fee in byte, Obite's main token. You can donate other popular cryptocurrencies, though. Just pick the GitHub repository you like, paste the URL or name in the Kiva search, and send the amount you want. The funds will wait there until the project owner claims them. To receive donations, the setup is quick.
Starting point is 00:08:24 Install the Obite wallet, link it to your GitHub account through a simple attestation bot, and decide how to share the income. You can keep everything or pass a share to other developers who helped you build your work. If you want to discover more cipherpunk and privacy software projects you can visit our previous episodes five open source projects you can donate to via kiva episode four privacy tools five open source tools you can donate to via kiva episode six decentralized services five cyber security tools to use for free and donate to via kiva five open source and free operating systems to donate via kiva five open source free software you didn't know you needed to protect your data five open source crypto tools
Starting point is 00:09:08 you can use for free and support with Kiva. Five free data recovery and backup projects to donate to via Kiva. Five open source research tools to support via Kiva. Five open source software for global teams to donate via Kiva. Featured Vector Image by Vector Juice, FreePig. Thank you for listening to this Hackernoon story, read by artificial intelligence. Visit hackernoon.com to read, write, learn and publish.

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