


If you're worried about someone that can hijack SSL sessions, then you're screwed anyways if you're using the website version, which is almost assuredly the version you'd be using on one of those machines. so basically anyone that isn't approaching the power of a nation state), then the SSL certificate alone would do a good enough job securing the communication (and many common chat protocols support SSL connections. For any casual malicious entities on the network (i.e.

If it's the owner (or anyone else that can touch them) of each of those machines, you can simply forget about that to begin with, as a keylogger would easily defeat Cryptocat (and OTR, and everything else that didn't encrypt the data before it entered the computer). > chat privately from an internet bar, a kiosk, a computer in hotel,etcĮxactly who are you wanting privacy from? I'd imagine, though, it'd depend hugely on which client you used it with (I'm sure some are absolute nightmares). The few times I've bothered to use OTR, it was incredibly easy to setup (no more difficult than any program).
