The Brave browser, which has features for digital currencies, has announced that unlimited and private video calls are already possible on the platform.
Brave wrote on Twitter that video conferencing is currently available in the trial and development version and Brave Nightly. The platform, called Brave Together, allows end-to-end user encryption for video calls, but is still in beta and has not yet been completed.
The Brave Together platform is based on encrypted video chat software and open source Jitsi, which is also a popular Edward Snowden software.
You do not need to create an account to use this platform, but you need to use a browser.
The outbreak of Corona virus has led to a sharp increase in the use of video conferencing platforms because countries around the world are in strict quarantine and people have been forced to hold meetings or contact family and friends online.
One of these popular platforms is the Zoom platform. Shares of the program have doubled since the Corona Crisis began, as schools, governments and startups use the platform to connect with each other.
But there are concerns about privacy on the Zoom platform. Contacts are not encrypted to the user as a user, and Zoom's privacy policies give the company the right to collect personal information, even if users do not have a Zoom account.
Even SpaceX, owned by Elon Musk, has banned its employees from using zoom.
Bryo's browser, which has been hailed by digital currency enthusiasts such as the Winklevos brothers and Chang Peng Zhao, CEO of Binance, offers more privacy and digital currency rewards programs in the form of BAT tokens. The platform has criticized Google's monopoly.
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