Given the presence of Snooping and Network shutdowns – what to use in a Crisis?
I found this video about Reticulum very useful. Yes, it’s a tech heavy thing. Yes, it still has some minor issues in the demonstration (that he had to fix). But also YES, it looks like the desired state of tech for persistent private & anonymous communications in the face of network outages and State Suppression during “emergencies”.
It covers a project called “Reticulum” that has encryption at the base of it, and runs across different devices on different frequencies and networks, with anonymity and privacy; including over Meshtastic hardware (so not dependent on Cell Service providers, ISPs, or governments).
https://reticulum.network/
Reticulum
Reticulum is the cryptography-based networking stack for building local and wide-area networks with readily available hardware. Reticulum can continue to operate even in adverse conditions with very high latency and extremely low bandwidth.
The vision of Reticulum is to allow anyone to operate their own sovereign communication networks, and to make it cheap and easy to cover vast areas with a myriad of independent, interconnectable and autonomous networks. Reticulum is Unstoppable Networks for The People.
Reticulum is not one network. It is a tool for building thousands of networks. Networks without kill-switches, surveillance, censorship and control. Networks that can freely interoperate, associate and disassociate with each other. Reticulum is Networks for Human Beings.
From a users perspective, Reticulum allows the creation of applications that respect and empower the autonomy and sovereignty of communities and individuals. Reticulum provides secure digital communication that cannot be subjected to outside control, manipulation or censorship.
Reticulum enables the construction of both small and potentially planetary-scale networks, without any need for hierarchical or beaureucratic structures to control or manage them, while ensuring individuals and communities full sovereignty over their own network segments.
Notable Characteristics
While Reticulum solves the same problem that any network stack does, namely to get data reliably from one point to another over a number of intermediaries, it does so in a way that is very different from other networking technologies.
Reticulum does not use source addresses. No packets transmitted include information about the address, place, machine or person they originated from.
There is no central control over the address space in Reticulum. Anyone can allocate as many addresses as they need, when they need them.
Reticulum ensures end-to-end connectivity. Newly generated addresses become globally reachable in a matter of seconds to a few minutes.
Addresses are self-sovereign and portable. Once an address has been created, it can be moved physically to another place in the network, and continue to be reachable.
All communication is secured with strong, modern encryption by default.
All encryption keys are ephemeral, and communication offers forward secrecy by default.
It is not possible to establish unencrypted links in Reticulum networks.
It is not possible to send unencrypted packets to any destinations in the network.
Destinations receiving unencrypted packets will drop them as invalid.
I’ve been holding off on buying Meshtastic hardware as I was figuring out which product to buy. (I also bought a couple of “how to” books for Meshtastic and was working my way through them prior to a purchase). I’m now going to buy the Meshtastic hardware used in this Reticulum build, since it can do both.
This looks, to me, like the end stage product needed for Persistent Private communications in any AwShit where infrastructure may be fried or State Actors may be indulging in suppression. “The bits gotta flow, Mal” ;-)
195,012 views Feb 22, 2026 1 product
Unstoppable mesh.In this video, I build a Reticulum RNode and prove that completely different radios — LoRa and Wi-Fi — can communicate through a hardware-agnostic networking stack. Reticulum routes traffic above the radio layer, automatically bridging dissimilar frequencies, interfaces, and modulation types. I then run it over Wi-Fi HaLow Haven nodes to create a long-range, encrypted IP mesh with no traditional infrastructure. Finally, I push it further by running ATAK across the network, demonstrating a fully open-source, decentralized communication stack in action.
Parallel Reticulum Guide
https://buildwithparallel.com/products/rnode-build-guideMark’s RNode Blog Post https://unsigned.io/rnode/
Sideband (Reticulum Client)
https://github.com/markqvist/Sideband
Sideband
Sideband is an LXMF client for Android, Linux and macOS. It allows you to communicate with other people or LXMF-compatible systems over Reticulum networks using LoRa, Packet Radio, WiFi, I2P, or anything else Reticulum supports.
Sideband also supports exchanging messages through encrypted QR-codes on paper, or through messages embedded directly in lxm:// links.
Sideband is completely free, end-to-end encrypted, permission-less, anonymous and infrastructure-less. Sideband uses the peer-to-peer and distributed messaging system LXMF. There is no sign-up, no service providers, no “end-user license agreements”, no data theft and no surveillance. You own the system.
This also means that Sideband operates differently than what you might be used to. It does not need a connection to a server on the Internet to function, and you do not have an account anywhere. Please read the Guide section included in the program, to get an understanding of how Sideband differs from other messaging systems.
The program currently includes basic functionality for secure and independent communication, and many useful features are planned for implementation. Sideband is currently released as a beta version. Please help make all the functionality a reality by supporting the development with donations.
Sideband works well with the terminal-based LXMF client Nomad Network, which allows you to easily host Propagation Nodes for your LXMF network, and more.
If you want to help develop this program, get in touch. The source code for Sideband can be found on the GitHub repository.
Installation
For your Android devices, download an APK on the latest release page. If you prefer to install via F-Droid, you can add the IzzyOnDroid Repository to your F-Droid client, which includes Sideband.A DMG file containing a macOS app bundle is also available on the latest release page.
Aditionally, you can install Sideband with pip on Linux and macOS:
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And a lot more at the link. So looks like the first step easiest to try is sideband on phones over the household WiFi, then do the LoRa radio build for added range and wider audience reach. Then? Investigate more options ;-) Probably an I2P node as I need to get this site back up on a persistent I2P machine (last time was just a proof of concept demo).
Development Roadmap
Adding a Nomad Net page browser
Implementing the Local Broadcasts feature
Adding a debug log option and viewer
Adding a Linux .desktop file
Message sorting mechanism
Fix I2P status not being displayed correctly when the I2P router disappears unexpectedly
Adding LXMF sneakernet and paper message functionalityLicense
Sideband is Copyright © 2022 Mark Qvist / unsigned.io, and unless otherwise noted, this work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.Permission is hereby granted to use Sideband in binary form, for any and all purposes, and to freely distribute binary copies of the program, so long as no payment or compensation is charged or received for such distribution or use.
And his https://unsigned.io/ site
