Twister is a Twitter-like microblogging platform that utilizes the same blockchain technology as
Bitcoin and the file-exchange method of
BitTorrent, both based on
P2P technology. Twister was alpha-phase experimental software in 2014, implemented as a distributed
file sharing system. User registration and authentication are provided by a Bitcoin-like network, so it does not depend on a central authority. Distribution of posts uses a
Kademlia distributed hash table (DHT) network and BitTorrent-like swarms, both provided by
libtorrent. Miguel Freitas, aiming to build a censor-resistant public posting platform, began development of Twister in July 2013 to address free-speech and privacy concerns. Building on Bitcoin and Bittorrent, he built the core structure in October 2013. Lucas Leal was hired to create HTML and CSS for the user interface, with Freitas writing the required JavaScript code. Twenty-five hundred user accounts were registered in the platform's first six days of operation. Twister cannot be incapacitated (since there is no central point to attack), and uses end-to-end encryption. As a consequence of decentralization, a user will be unable to regain access to their "account" if they lose access to their secret key. == History ==