If I pair my Android phone and my laptop, I can share files over Bluetooth from the phone to the laptop. I’ve started finding this a really convenient method for me to send files to a Linux laptop without needing to install a separate app on either the phone or my laptop. Especially when I’m away from my home network (I use SFTP at home).

How secure is this? Is there encryption by default and could someone else nearby with a receiver potentially decode the file you’re sending?

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      312 hours ago

      No, thanks:

      It uses a WebRTC peer-to-peer connection. WebRTC needs a signaling server that is only used to establish a connection. The server is not involved in the file transfer.

      If your devices are paired and behind a NAT, the PairDrop TURN Server is used to route your files and messages.

      • @Deckweiss
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        1
        edit-2
        4 hours ago

        What’s so bad about servers?

        Both are open source.

        The signaling server just sees the IPs of your devices and matches them by roomID.

        The turn server sees only locally encrypted files and your IPs (and it is used only IF you are behind a NAT).

        As far as I see, there is no way for anything bad happening, but I am happy to learn if you know something. If you need it for a proof, I’d gladly give you some of my IPs and encrypted files - see what you can do with them.

          • @Deckweiss
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            117 minutes ago

            The file does not get uploaded to remote servers. It passes through them, fully encrypted, and the server does not have the keys to decrypt your files.