Amigo introduces a decentralized continuous key agreement protocol and novel
routing scheme for secure group mesh messaging over short-range radio (Bluetooth/
Wi-Fi Direct) when governments disable the Internet during protests. Extensive
simulations demonstrate that prior approaches fail to scale to realistic protest
environments that have high link churn, physical spectrum contention, and dense
mobility — Amigo's protest-specific optimizations address these but also reveal
that scaling to protests with thousands of participants remains an open challenge.
From 2025-inyangson-amigo — Amigo: Secure Group Mesh Messaging in Realistic Protest Settings
· §Abstract
· 2025
· Computer and Communications Security
Implications
Bluetooth/Wi-Fi Direct mesh communication is a viable Internet-bypass channel during shutdowns for small-to-medium groups; tool operators should integrate mesh fallback modes but must budget for key agreement overhead that degrades significantly above a few hundred nodes.
Prior mesh apps (Bridgefy) had cryptographic weaknesses; any mesh messaging integration must use a protocol with forward secrecy and group key agreement (e.g., MLS-based) to avoid passive surveillance by infiltrators in the mesh.