The Guardian Project is about more than just apps. All of our code is open-source in order to move the collective ball forward in mobile security efforts. In addition we are building developer-focused libraries, tools and source code for you to add security-oriented features and capabilities to your own apps.
Clean Insights gives developers a way to plug into a secure, private measurement platform. It is focused on assisting in answering key questions about app usage patterns, and not on enabling invasive surveillance of all user habits. Our approach provides programmatic levers to pull to cater to specific use cases and privacy needs. It also provides methods for user interactions that are ultimately empowering instead of alienating.
Clean Insights is available as a lightweight, minimal impact, freely licensed toolkit to include in your mobile app, desktop app, website or back-end service.
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Wind: Off-Grid Services for Everyday People
GitHub - blog posts When disaster strikes, connectivity becomes difficult. Information can save your life, guiding you to safety and services. Networks today are fragile and easy overloaded. There has not been enough investment in the many other possible nets, that may be better suited for situations where connections to the global internet are not available or affordable. The potential in radios, sensors and processing available in the cheapest of smartphones and routers are not fully utilized or realized.
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PanicKit: system-wide panic responses
GitLab - GitHub - Javadoc - blog posts PanicKit is a collection of tools for creating “panic buttons” that can trigger a system-wide response when the user is in an anxious or dangerous situation. It enables trigger apps and responder apps to safely and easily connect to each other. The user engages with the trigger app when in a panic situation. The responder apps receive that trigger signal, and individually execute the steps that they were configured to do.
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CacheWord: Passphrase Caching and Management
GitLab - GitHub - Javadoc - blog posts CacheWord is an Android library project for passphrase caching and management.
It helps app developers securely generate, store, and access secrets derived
from a user’s passphrase. It is designed to work easily with IOCipher and SQLCipher-for-Android, but it can be used any time an app needs to manage a password. Broadly speaking this library assists developers with two related problems:
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TrustedIntents: flexible trusted interactions between Android apps
GitLab - GitHub - blog posts TrustedIntents is a library for flexible trusted interactions between Android apps. It is modeled after Android’s signature protection level for permissions. The key difference is that the framework allows the trusted signature to be set, rather than requiring to match the current app’s signature.
For more info:
https://dev.guardianproject.info/projects/trustedintents/wiki/Wiki/ https://guardianproject.info/2014/01/21/improving-trust-and-flexibility-in-interactions-between-android-apps/ https://developer.android.com/guide/topics/manifest/permission-element.html#plevel Downloads The binary jar, source jar, and javadoc jar are all available on jcenter.
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NetCipher: Secured Networking
GitLab - GitHub - Javadoc - blog posts Better TLS and Tor App Integration
NetCipher is a library for Android that provides multiple means to improve network security in mobile applications. It provides best practices TLS settings using the standard Android HttpURLConnection methods, HttpURLConnection, OkHTTP3, Volley, and Apache HTTP Client, provides simple Tor integration, makes it easy to configure proxies for HTTP connections and WebView instances.
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IOCipher: Virtual Encrypted Disks
GitLab - GitHub - Javadoc - blog posts IOCipher provides a virtual encrypted disk for Android apps without requiring the device to be rooted. It uses a clone of the standard java.io API for working with files, so developers already know how to use it. Only password handling, and opening the virtual disk are what stand between the developer and working encrypted file storage.
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libsqlfs: filesystem on top of SQLite/SQLCipher
libsqlfs provides a complete virtual disk on top of a SQLite or SQLCipher database. The virtual disk is encrypted and contained in a single file, which can be easily moved around, copied, shared, etc. It is a standard FUSE filesytem that can work on Android, GNU/Linux, and perhaps also macOS.
SQLCipher: Encrypted Database
GitHub - blog posts In an environment where mobile data privacy is increasingly in the headlines, this project will make it easier than ever for mobile developers to properly secure their local application data, and in turn better protect the privacy of their users. The data stored by Android apps protected by this type of encryption will be less vulnerable to access by malicious apps, protected in case of device loss or theft, and highly resistant to mobile data forensics tools that are increasingly used to mass copy a mobile device during routine traffic stops.
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TorService: Tor library for Android
GitLab - GitHub - Javadoc - blog posts This is native Android TorService built on the Tor shared library built for Android. It is designed around the Android lifecycle. The included libtor.so binaries can also be used directly as a tor daemon. This is used in Orbot, TorServices, OnionShare, and more.
Features Native Android TorService for running Tor in a background service Designed around modern Android tools like WorkManager Reproducible Build with included Vagrant setup for running them Source Code Repository library, helpers, tests, and sample project: https://github.
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