SEF Digital Meet is an open-source (Apache) WebRTC JavaScript application that uses Jitsi Videobridge to provide high quality, secure and scalable video conferences. SEF Digital Meet in action can be seen at here at the session #482 of the VoIP Users Conference.
The SEF Digital Meet client runs in your browser, without installing anything on your computer. You can try it out at https://meet.jit.si.
SEF Digital Meet allows for very efficient collaboration. Users can stream their desktop or only some windows. It also supports shared document editing with Etherpad.
NOTE: If you are looking for Jitsi as a Service (JaaS) please start here.
On the client side, no installation is necessary. You just point your browser to the URL of your deployment. This section is about installing a SEF Digital Meet suite on your server and hosting your own conferencing service.
Installing SEF Digital Meet is a simple experience. For Debian-based system, following the quick install document, which uses the package system. You can also see a demonstration of the process in this tutorial video.
For other systems, or if you wish to install all components manually, see the detailed manual installation instructions.
Installation with Docker is also available. Please see the instruction.
Latest stable release |
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You can download Debian/Ubuntu binaries:
You can download source archives (produced by make source-package
):
You can also sign up for our open beta testing here:
Release notes for SEF Digital Meet are maintained on this repository.
For web development see here, and for mobile see here.
If you are looking to contribute to SEF Digital Meet, first of all, thank you! Please see our guidelines for contributing.
SEF Digital Meet provides a very flexible way of embedding in external applications by using the SEF Digital Meet API.
The security section here was starting to feel a bit too succinct for the complexity of the topic, so we created a post that covers the topic much more broadly here: https://jitsi.org/security
The section on end-to-end encryption in that document is likely going to be one of the key points of interest: https://jitsi.org/security/#e2ee
For information on reporting security vulnerabilities in SEF Digital Meet, see SECURITY.md.
SEF Digital Meet started out as a sample conferencing application using Jitsi Videobridge. It was originally developed by ESTOS' developer Philipp Hancke who then contributed it to the community where development continues with joint forces!