A specification for implementing private groups in scuttlebutt.
The fundamentals of this spec are:
- uses envelope for encryption of content
- has group_ids which are safe to share publicly
- adding people to the group is done with group's knowledge
- supports disclosing of message content
- but this leaks info about the group (peak at other messages / authors)
In adition to the envelope-spec, there are some scuttlebutt-specific specifications
box1 took feedIds from the content.recps
field and directly used these for encryption.
In envelope, we instead take "ids" from content.recps
, and map each to a key+scheme pair { key, scheme }
where":
key
is the encryption key which will be used in akey_slot
, andscheme
is the "key management scheme" which that key is employing
Type of id | How key is derived |
scheme |
---|---|---|
private group id | a key-store | "envelope-large-symmetric-group" |
feedId (someone else) | diff-hellman styles | "envelope-id-based-dm-converted-ed25519" |
feedId (yours) | locally stored key | "envelope-symmetric-key-for-self" |
P.O. Box id | diffie-hellman styles | "envelope-id-based-pobox-curve25519" |
see key-schemes.json
for the canonical list of accepted schema labels
We talk about key_slots
or recipients / recps
a little interchangeably.
Let's assume content.recps
are mapped to key_slots
preserving their order.
- there are max 16 slots on a message
- if there is a group key
- a) there is only 1 group key
- b) the group key is in the first key_slot
- we disallow you from making a shared DM key with yourself
More detail:
- (1) means all implementations know to look 16 slots deep when trying to unbox the msg_key
- (2.a) provides a guarentee that infomation is not leaked across groups, in particular tangle info would leak info about group memember as these ids are not cloaked in this version
- (2.a + 2.b) means we that we only need to try group keys in the first slot. If that fails, we can try DM keys on slots 1-16. (nice and fast!)
- (3) is a tight restriction which we think will help people write better apps
- it's a step towards forward security
- if you want to send to self, it encourages people to mint a group, which is a better practice when moving to support multi-device identities
- we may relax this restriction when we have more experience
A minimal amount of agreement to make coordination easier:
- creating a new group
- creating a new epoch
- adding someone to your group
- posting a message to a group
- excluding someone from a group
describe
- how all these things might be woven together
- where state is tracked off-chain (in a key-store)
Group IDs have moved from being sigil links like
%g/JTmMEjG4JP2aQAO0LM8tIoRtNkTq07Se6h1qwnQKb=.cloaked
to being SSB URIS like
ssb:identity/group/g_JTmMEjG4JP2aQAO0LM8tIoRtNkTq07Se6h1qwnQKb=
Could modify this spec:
-
- same
-
- same
-
- same
- supports privacy fiendly disclosing of message content
- all internal cypherlinks are "cloaked"
While we have tried our best to create a secure end-to-end encrypted communication protocol, this spec is not fit for use in safety critical situations. The specification has not been vetted by an independent party. Even assuming a bug-free spec, we have intentionally left out several security features that are considered state of the art in other apps such as Signal, such as "forward secrecy".
Because of this, we advise that anyone that implements this spec in an app, includes prominent UI that warns the user about possible risks.
- ssb-tribes2 - A module implementing this spec in js
- ssb-tribes2-demo - A demo electron app that shows off the features of
ssb-tribes2
- ssb-group-exclusion-spec - The spec that defines exclusion from a private group