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  • ...d Murmur (Debian/Ubuntu), Murmur is configured to run as a system service, just like your webserver, mailserver and whatever else you have running. This "g ...igure the welcome text, port number and other settings. However, these are just default settings and can be overwritten via the [[Ice]] RPC without changin
    9 KB (1,397 words) - 21:12, 29 June 2020
  • There's a new group called '''@strong''', and all users with a signed certificate will be a member of this group. ...really belongs to the user. Second, Murmur will use this fact to allow any strong certificate for the user's email address to authenticate. So if the users'
    5 KB (891 words) - 20:00, 23 October 2014
  • ...guided through the process of generating a certificate. A certificate uses strong public key cryptography to securely and uniquely identify a user to a serve ...ed drag and drop capability, if you want to connect to a server on startup just drag it from the list to your desktop.
    13 KB (2,097 words) - 19:31, 5 November 2014
  • As of version [[1.2.0]], Mumble supports strong encryption and authentication based on certificates instead of passwords. ...ve not created a certificate in their client, then Mumble will pretty much just authenticate as with 1.1.x and earlier. The password is not saved, and must
    4 KB (572 words) - 15:07, 19 November 2017
  • ...server, and they can't be removed without restarting the Murmur process - just let them expire. A single, properly functioning client should not trip thes ...setting currently only applies to IPv4 addresses, and that it is currently just a simple XOR with a random value - it is probably trivially broken if a use
    26 KB (4,099 words) - 16:14, 12 March 2024
  • ...e to manually accept the server certificate as trusted. To indicate these "strong" server certificates, such servers are marked green in the public server li
    3 KB (467 words) - 15:19, 17 April 2017