Why Nostr? What is Njump?
2024-09-13 14:00:20

Amber 2.0.0

#

  • New sign keys, to use this version you will need to first backup your accounts, uninstall the old version and install the new version
  • When you not configured a notification type Amber will ask you to configure and default to direct connection to relays
  • Check if is a valid relay before adding it when changing the default relays or adding a relay to a application

Download it with zap.store, Obtainium, f-droid or download it directly in the releases page

If you like my work consider making a donation

Verifying the release

In order to verify the release, you'll need to have gpg or gpg2 installed on your system. Once you've obtained a copy (and hopefully verified that as well), you'll first need to import the keys that have signed this release if you haven't done so already:

gpg --keyserver hkps://keys.openpgp.org --recv-keys 44F0AAEB77F373747E3D5444885822EED3A26A6D

Once you have his PGP key you can verify the release (assuming manifest-v2.0.0.txt and manifest-v2.0.0.txt.sig are in the current directory) with:

gpg --verify manifest-v2.0.0.txt.sig manifest-v2.0.0.txt

You should see the following if the verification was successful:

gpg: Signature made Fri 13 Sep 2024 08:06:52 AM -03
gpg:                using RSA key 44F0AAEB77F373747E3D5444885822EED3A26A6D
gpg: Good signature from "greenart7c3 <[email protected]>"

That will verify the signature on the main manifest page which ensures integrity and authenticity of the binaries you've downloaded locally. Next, depending on your operating system you should then re-calculate the sha256 sum of the binary, and compare that with the following hashes:

cat manifest-v2.0.0.txt

One can use the shasum -a 256 <file name here> tool in order to re-compute the sha256 hash of the target binary for your operating system. The produced hash should be compared with the hashes listed above and they should match exactly.

Author Public Key
npub1w4uswmv6lu9yel005l3qgheysmr7tk9uvwluddznju3nuxalevvs2d0jr5