On April 6, 2007, the project development team announced the results of their settlement with AOL, which included a series of name changes: Gaim became Pidgin, libgaim became libpurple, and gaim-text (the command-line interface version) became Finch. As AOL Instant Messenger gained popularity, AOL trademarked its acronym, "AIM", leading to a lengthy legal struggle with the creators of GAIM, who kept the matter largely secret. In response to pressure from AOL, the program was renamed to the acronymous-but-lowercase gaim. They have received points for having communications encrypted in transit, having communications encrypted with keys the providers don't have access to ( end-to-end encryption), making it possible for users to independently verify their correspondent's identities, having past communications secure if the keys are stolen ( forward secrecy), having their code open to independent review ( open source), having their security designs well-documented, and having recent independent security audits. On 6 July 2015, Pidgin scored seven out of seven points on the Electronic Frontier Foundation's secure messaging scorecard. Support for other IM protocols was added soon thereafter. Development was assisted by some of AOL's technical staff. The emulation was not based on reverse engineering, but instead relied on information about the protocol that AOL had published on the web. It was named GAIM ( GTK+ AOL Instant Messenger) accordingly. The earliest archived release was on December 31, 1998. The program was originally written by Mark Spencer, an Auburn University sophomore, as an emulation of AOL's IM program AOL Instant Messenger on Linux using the GTK+ toolkit. ![]() Gaim 2.0.0 beta 6 running under GNOME 2.16.0 For this reason it is included in the privacy- and anonymity-focused operating system Tails. Pidgin is widely used for its Off-the-Record Messaging (OTR) plugin, which offers end-to-end encryption. Pidgin (formerly named Gaim) is a free and open-source multi-platform instant messaging client, based on a library named libpurple that has support for many instant messaging protocols, allowing the user to simultaneously log in to various services from a single application, with a single interface for both popular and obsolete protocols (from AIM (software) to Discord), thus avoiding the hassle of having to deal with a new software for each device and protocol.Īs of 2007, the number of Pidgin users was estimated to be over three million. Maybe some of the LE team could offer a little extra encouragement, too.C ( C#, Perl, Python, Tcl are used for plugins) Would be a great boon if folks could head over there and help boost the signal on either/both of these issues, and perhaps encourage the team to get them incorporated into Pidgin sooner (there’s requests for root CAs going back months and even years that have had absolutely no movement). I’ve opened two tickets with the Pidgin team, one to have IdenTrust’s root added (really why weren’t they already there?), and another to have Let’s Encrypt’s root added. ![]() Apparently, at least on Windows, Pidgin maintains its own entirely separate store of CA roots. However, Pidgin on Windows says it isn’t signed by any trusted CA. Pidgin on Ubuntu 12.04 happily accepts it as a trusted certificate, as does Adium on Mac OSX. ![]() ![]() Until I switched my XMPP server (Prosody) over to using it. So got my beta certificates, and got them installed into my nginx server (even managed to figure out why OCSP stapling wasn’t working and got that fixed), and everything is happy.
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