Riot Founder Describes Vision of Open Source Collaboration



Riot Founder Describes Vision of Open Source Collaboration Software

Riot, a secure messaging environment that brings online collaboration into one workspace, recently announced its official launch following a successful beta test.

Built around group chatrooms, Riot lets users share messages, images, videos and files, and interact with various tools and platforms under one roof. It provides a single identity and place for all teams to gather to communicate and collaborate on projects without the need to switch between accounts and services.

Riot runs on Matrix, an open-source collaboration platform that facilitates instant messaging, VoIP, and even Internet of Things communication. It bridges to external networks, such as Slack, IRC, Twitter and RSS. Other networks and productivity tools to be added include Skype, Google Hangouts, Basecamp and Microsoft Lync.

Initially built by developers for developers, Riot is free and open source software. It publishes all of the code on GitHub, where anyone can see, modify and run it.



Riot’s Open Source Collaboration Software Vision

According to Amandine Le Pape, co-founder and head of product, who spoke to Small Business Trends via Skype, the vision behind Riot is two-fold:

  • Free users from closed silos and empower each team member to keep using their favorite messaging app whatever it may be;
  • Protect data privacy by allowing users to own their data and share it with those they choose.

Riot Opens Communication Silos

Today, email is the only ubiquitous collaboration tool, the Riot announcement claims. Unfortunately, it lacks the features needed to make team communication and collaboration effective. On the other hand, tools that do include functionality such as group chat, bots and voice and video calling are often fragmented and keep users hidden within a silo.



Riot seeks to create a single workspace through which disparate teams can communicate and collaborate regardless of the app or platform in use.

Riot Protects Data Privacy

Another aspect of Riot’s vision is to protect data privacy from breaches. It enables users and teams to share their data securely so that no one other than trusted parties can access it, developers claim.

Le Pape summarized the company’s vision for the platform this way:

“Riot gives people the power to choose the messaging app they want to use, the power to use any integration available in an open ecosystem, to encrypt their conversations, to run their own server and fully own their data, to choose how they want to be notified and to innovate on top of an open standard.”



Riot Features

Riot’s main features include:

  • Custom chatroom setup;
  • Group chat, VoIP and video calling;
  • App bridging bringing together users from diverse networks;
  • Integrations to a variety of productivity tools and bots;
  • Easy onboarding via invitations sent to team members to join rooms as guests and, optionally, to sign up for an account;
  • Instant message, image, video and file sharing with groups;
  • Full message search;
  • End-to-end data encryption.

Small Business Use

Even small businesses need help communicating, especially when everyone is not at the same location. Employees in different offices or freelancers contracted to work on projects may have their own preference for communication platforms and productivity tools.

The need to switch between tools to suit the needs of each person is not only onerous and time-consuming but makes little sense given that platforms like Riot exist.

While the business owner may wish to encourage the use of a single system — Slack, for example — how much better if everyone could continue using their preferred platform and still collaborate across the board. That’s what Le Pape and Riot’s other founders hope to accomplish.



Riot is available free on the web, in the App Store, on Google Play and from F-Droid. Visit the website to learn more or to sign up.

Image: Riot Comment ▼



Paul Chaney Paul Chaney is a Staff Writer for Small Business Trends. He covers industry news, including interviews with executives and industry leaders about the products, services and trends affecting small businesses, drawing on his 20 years of marketing knowledge. Formerly, he was editor of Web Marketing Today and a contributing editor for Practical Ecommerce.

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