People
Pages 206
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- Current Contributors
- Ian Clarke
- Matthew Toseland
- Oskar Sandberg
- Florent Daignière
- Michael Rogers
- Steve Dougherty
- xor
- Ximin Luo
- Bert Massop
- TheSeeker
- Tommy[D]
- Arne Babenhauserheide
- The translators
- Many more great hackers
- Anonymous Contributors
- Eleriseth
- Somedude
- The folks from Frost
- Previous Contributors
- Thomas Markus
- Scott Miller
- Steven Starr
- Dave Baker
- Robert Hailey
- David Sowder
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Current Contributors
Ian Clarke
Freenet is based on Ian's paper "A Distributed Decentralised Information Storage and Retrieval System". Ian started the Freenet Project around July of 1999, and continues to coordinate the project. Learn more about Ian on his personal website.
Matthew Toseland
Matthew has been working on Freenet since before the 0.5 release. His work and that of others has resulted in dramatic improvements to the performance and stability of the network.
Oskar Sandberg
Oskar was also one of the earliest contributors to the Freenet project, and has made some important theoretical breakthroughs that lead to the beginning of Freenet 0.7, see the papers page.
Florent Daignière
Since 2003, Florent has improved various aspects of the software and performed the project's system administration. In his day job, he is the Technical Director of Matta Consulting, a boutique security consultancy firm.
Michael Rogers
Michael has mostly contributed detailed simulations as part of the Google Summer of Code. He has been helpful in designing the New Transport Layer.
Steve Dougherty
The current release manager. He joined in GSoC 2013 and has been a driving force behind tackling long standing issues in Freenet.
xor
The Developer of the Web of Trust and Freetalk. He worked on the Web of Trust in part-time for one year and is now working as volunteer again.
Ximin Luo
A Debian developer who currently works on packaging Freenet.
Bert Massop
Works on the Freenet core and wherever there is need.
TheSeeker
A long term contributor who, among other things, helps keep the contact between the core developers and users in active subgroups.
Tommy[D]
A Gentoo packager who untangled all the dependencies of Freenet and packaged it cleanly in Gentoo.
Arne Babenhauserheide
The current maintainer of pyFreenet and infocalypse. He also writes articles and tutorials for Freenet
The translators
A dilligent team of people from various backgrounds who make it possible to ship Freenet and this website in many different languages.
Many more great hackers
This list is missing many freesite authors, plugin writers, and a host of other people who contributed in various ways.
Anonymous Contributors
Eleriseth
Works on Freenet core and communicates via FMS.
Somedude
The developer of the Freenet-based Forum system FMS, of FreenetHG and of FLIP, chat over Freenet.
The folks from Frost
A group of users and programmers who use an old spammable Freenet-based forum system which has been abandoned by most of the core developers. They are active, however, and though it takes time for their contributions to reach to core development, they take part in Freenet development.
Previous Contributors
Thomas Markus
A dutch developer and statistic-enthusiast. He now works at Topicus.Education.
Scott Miller
Scott is responsible for the implementation of much of the cryptography elements within Freenet.
Steven Starr
Steven helps with administration of Freenet Project Inc, and is an advisor to the project on business and publicity matters.
Dave Baker
Dave's main contribution has been Freemail, his Summer of Code project to build a working email-over-Freenet system, as well as some debugging and core work in various places.
Robert Hailey
Robert has helped improve the speed and security of Freenet by finding two major bugs, and has recently contributed some code.
David Sowder
David (Zothar) has helped the Freenet project as time permits and interest directs, including configuration, statistics and peer management via FCP, the FProxy stats page and Node 2 Node Messages (N2NM/N2NTMs).
And hundreds of others, who either haven't asked to be added here, who prefer to remain nameless, or who we just haven't got around to thanking. Not to mention thousands of users, testers, and donors!