Jason Tudisco 7e9dc0773a feat(kez-chat): Messages UX rebuild — Keybase-style, friendly handles, explainer
Previous Messages page assumed you knew what a "handle" was and showed
truncated ed25519 hex everywhere. Reframed it so a newcomer can figure
out what to do without having read the spec.

Server:
  • GET /v1/by-primary/:primary — reverse lookup, ed25519:<hex> →
    handle record. Used by the SPA to render @alice instead of the
    truncated hex when an inbound envelope arrives from a peer we
    haven't chatted with yet. 3 new integration tests cover round-trip,
    NotFound, BadRequest-on-garbage.

Web — sidebar:
  • "Your KEZ" panel at top — handle@server with a copy button. The
    whole point: someone needs your KEZ to message you, so make
    sharing it one click.
  • "Start a chat" input accepts `alice` or `alice@kez.lat`. Resolves
    via /v1/u/:handle before adding — explicit error if unregistered,
    friendly "that's you" guard for self.
  • Conversation rows show resolved handles, not hex blobs.

Web — empty state:
  • 🔒 + "End-to-end encrypted chat" headline + plain-English paragraph
    explaining that even the server can't read messages.
  • Concrete starter hint: "open kez.lat in a second browser, create
    another account, message yourself between the two."

Conversation cache redesign:
  • Now keyed by peer_primary (canonical KEZ identity) with peer_handle
    as display metadata. Resolves the same-person-as-two-threads bug
    you'd hit when you sent to "alice" then alice replied (her primary
    didn't match the "alice" key).
  • IDB key bumped to :v2 — old shape abandoned (was placeholder data).
  • On inbound, ensureConversation refreshes the cached handle if we
    just resolved a fresher one.

Followups still queued: cross-server lookups, NATS push, group chats,
"find someone by their published claim" (paste their gist / dns proof
to discover their handle).

Live at https://kez.lat.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-25 22:12:46 -06:00

KEZ

KEZ is a portable, decentralized identity graph. It lets a person say:

"These accounts, keys, domains, and identities are all me."

…without depending on any central authority. Every connection is proven by a cryptographic signature against a key the user already controls (a nostr key, an Ed25519 key, etc.), and the proofs are published in places only the claimed account itself can publish to (their gist, their DNS, their nostr relay event). Anyone can verify the graph without trusting a server.

Repository layout

.
├── SPEC.md              ← The protocol. Language-agnostic, normative.
├── rust/                ← Rust implementation (kez-core, kez-channels, kez-cli)
├── nodejs/              ← TypeScript/Node implementation (same shape, same CLI)
├── rust-sig-server/     ← Optional HTTP store for sigchains (axum + SQLite)
├── crosstest.sh         ← Interop test: artifacts move between implementations
└── README.md            ← (this file)

Two parallel implementations. Wire-compatible: a claim signed in Rust verifies in Node and vice versa. The cross-test harness proves it.

A separate rust-sig-server/ crate provides an optional HTTP storage tier for sigchains — useful when a user doesn't want to set up DNS/hosting/nostr, but never required; the protocol stays decentralized.

Documentation

Start here:

  • SPEC.md — the language-agnostic protocol spec (v0.2). Normative for every implementation.
  • rust/README.md — Rust implementation guide: crate layout (kez-core / kez-channels / kez-cli), full CLI reference, channel plugin model, library examples, and the gap list.
  • nodejs/README.md — Node/TypeScript port: same shape as Rust, npm workspaces layout, crypto stack rationale, CLI reference.
  • rust-sig-server/README.md — the optional storage server: API reference, no-auth design + threat model, deployment recipes (bare-metal, Docker, PaaS), and how channel-based publishing remains the fallback if the server is down.

Quick start

Rust

cd rust
cargo build
cargo test                                                # 99 tests
cargo install --path crates/kez-cli                       # → `kez` on PATH
kez verify id github:jason

Full guide: rust/README.md.

Node.js

cd nodejs
npm install
npm test                                                  # 91 tests
npm run cli -- verify id github:jason

Full guide: nodejs/README.md.

Sigchain storage server (optional)

cd rust-sig-server
cargo build --release
./target/release/kez-sig-server                           # listens on :7878

Full guide: rust-sig-server/README.md.

Cross-testing

./crosstest.sh

Runs 19 scenarios that swap implementations at the artifact boundary:

# Scenario
12 nostr-signed JSON claim, both directions
34 nostr-signed compact claim, both directions
56 nostr-signed markdown claim, both directions
78 nostr-signed DNS zone form, both directions
910 ed25519-signed JSON claim, both directions
1112 ed25519-signed compact claim, both directions
1314 ed25519-signed markdown claim, both directions
15 rust builds 3-event nostr sigchain → node parses + shows
16 rust-exported sigchain JSONL == node-exported JSONL (byte-identical)
17 node builds 3-event nostr sigchain → rust parses + shows
18 rust builds ed25519 sigchain → node parses + shows
19 node builds ed25519 sigchain → rust parses + shows

If all 19 pass: JCS canonicalization, both signature suites (BIP-340 Schnorr and Ed25519), the compact kez:z1: zstd+base64url encoding, the Markdown fence, the DNS TXT shape, and the sigchain JSONL bundle format are all byte-compatible across implementations.

Pass -v for verbose output (echoes intermediate commands and proofs).

What ships in v0.2

  • Five channel plugins in each implementation: dns:, github:, nostr:, bluesky:, ap: (alias mastodon:).
  • Four wire encodings: JSON, compact, Markdown fence, DNS TXT.
  • Two primary-key algorithms: nostr/secp256k1 Schnorr (BIP-340) and Ed25519 (RFC 8032).
  • JCS (RFC 8785) canonicalization for everything signed.
  • No API keys required for any channel.

What's not done yet

Tracked in rust/README.md and the spec:

  • verify id consulting the sigchain. Sigchain types, CLI commands (kez sigchain add/revoke/show/export/publish), and the storage server all exist. But proof verification doesn't yet fetch the chain to check for revocations — every verify is still a single one-shot proof check.
  • rotate and add_device sigchain ops.
  • expires_at enforcement during claim verify.
  • Typed VerificationStatus.status reflecting the five failure modes (valid / revoked / expired / unreachable / fork).
  • Auth-required publishers (GitHub gist, Bluesky, ActivityPub).

License

Dual-licensed under MIT or Apache-2.0.

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