Private Video Chat Servers on Demand
Emphasis on
Private.
Video chat apps and video conferencing solutions are ubiquitous these days, but are they private?
Jarion Lanier, tech-wizard, savant and artist, founder of VR, said that if we're going to communicate online, we should not be limited to comms channels provided by corporations that strive to influence us (para-phrasing).
So if a chat provider records who you call, when you call and for how long, gathers and collates info about your location, your contact info and so on with the intention of using that data to fine-tune their advertising efforts, then how private is that call?
Native apps installed on mobiles and desktops can be even more invasive since they can dig far deeper into your device than a webpage can.
ConneXense is, and shall remain, a webpage - a web-app that runs in browsers, subject to those security paradigms where permission (a "user-gesture" like clicking "OK") is required for any function which requires access to privileged information.
ConneXense ignores all meta-data spawned by activity on our servers, keeps no records and deletes everything at the end of each call. Retained only is registered users' login and preference data and schedules for future webinar events.
Video Chat Servers on Demand
"On demand" means that ConneXense is freely available whenever required - it is not neccessary to purchase or install an app and it's not even neccessary to be a registered user.
Without a ConneXense account, anyone can start a server and send it's URL to contacts so they can join in a call, one-to-one or in groups, simply by using a web browser.
ConneXense account holders enjoy additional privileges like screen-sharing, holding scheduled webinar events, personal background-replacement images and the use of push notifications.