Update matrix
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@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ A Matrix [identifier](https://matrix.org/docs/spec/appendices#common-identifier-
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Other sigil IDs include "!" for Room ID, "$" for Event ID, "+" for Group ID, and "#" for room alias.
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User accounts, once created on a homeserver, cannot be migrated. To change servers, a user must make a new account. [Automated tooling](https://modular.im/tools/matrix-migration) exists to help with inviting the new account into rooms the previous account was in.
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User accounts, once created on a homeserver, cannot be migrated. To change servers, a user must make a new account. [Automated tooling](https://modular.im/tools/matrix-migration) exists to help with inviting the new account into rooms the previous account was in. There are eventual plans to switch to user keys which will enable [portable identities](https://gist.github.com/neilalexander/90cf1fa6980ade4b3385ebf536f634fe). A Matrix account could also [map to a DID](https://github.com/friedger/matrix-doc/blob/3pid_did_association/proposals/1781-3pid-did-association.md).
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Users have a Matrix user ID, but can also use [3rd party IDs (3PIDs)](https://matrix.org/docs/spec/appendices#pid-types). Matrix identity servers map 3rd party IDs such as email addresses and phone numbers to Matrix ids. The use of this service is optional. A globally federated cluster of trusted identity servers verify and replicate the mappings, although this is considered a stopgap solution until a fully decentralized identity solution is adopted.
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@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ In the federated version of Matrix, all messages are currently sent out full-mes
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#### P2p
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Matrix has released a p2p version that runs client-side. P2p Matrix avoids the problem of homeservers accumulating metadata, and simplifies signup by not requiring new users to pick a homeserver. The new p2p implementation runs the homeserver on the client. The p2p network is currently separate from the federated network, but the end goal is to connect the two in a hybrid federated/p2p model. Network transports being considered for p2p Matrix include libp2p, Yggdrasil, or hyperswarm.
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Matrix has released a p2p version that runs client-side. P2p Matrix avoids the problem of homeservers accumulating metadata, and simplifies signup by not requiring new users to pick a homeserver. The new p2p implementation runs the homeserver on the client. The p2p network is currently separate from the federated network, but the end goal is to connect the two in a hybrid federated/p2p model. Network transports being considered for p2p Matrix include libp2p, Yggdrasil, or hyperswarm. In p2p Matrix, the hostname of the user is its libp2p or yggdrasil public key.
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https://matrix.org/blog/2020/06/02/introducing-p-2-p-matrix
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@ -55,7 +55,7 @@ Features supporting more advanced social functionality are being developed, such
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Matrix homeservers have access to metadata about conversations, because the homeservers of all users in a given conversation have to store that conversation's metadata. P2p Matrix mitigates this privacy issue.
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Matrix recently introduced end-to-end encryption by default for private messages. This was on the roadmap since the beginning, because conversations are replicated over every server participating in a room, and there is no guarantee against servers looking into conversations.
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Matrix recently introduced end-to-end encryption by default for private messages. This was on the roadmap since the beginning, because conversations are replicated over every server participating in a room, and there is no guarantee against servers looking into conversations. For Matrix E2E encryption, each device has its own identity key, and per-user keys are gossipped between devices when the user logs in.
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[olm e2e encryption](https://matrix.org/blog/2016/11/21/matrixs-olm-end-to-end-encryption-security-assessment-released-and-implemented-cross-platform-on-riot-at-last)
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[encryption for private messages](https://matrix.org/blog/2020/05/06/cross-signing-and-end-to-end-encryption-by-default-is-here)
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@ -80,10 +80,12 @@ The majority of traffic is currently instant messaging.
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### Scalability & Metrics
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Scalability study: https://arxiv.org/pdf/1910.06295.pdf
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Matrix “rooms” replicate message content across all participating servers, but lazily-replicates file content. A server only retrieves a file if a user on that server requests it.
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The public network currently (Feb 2020) has 17.9M known addressable users (as of June 2020), with more in private federations or on servers which don't report stats. 30% of publicly visible users are on the matrix.org homeserver. There are many smaller servers as well.
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Scalability study: https://arxiv.org/pdf/1910.06295.pdf
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There are over 1,500 active developers in the community.
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### Links
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