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src | ||
tests | ||
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config.nims | ||
LICENSE | ||
nitter.conf | ||
nitter.nimble | ||
README.md | ||
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Nitter (WIP)
A free and open source alternative Twitter front-end focused on privacy.
Inspired by the invidio.us project.
- No JavaScript or ads
- All requests go through the backend, client never talks to Twitter
- Prevents Twitter from tracking your IP or JavaScript fingerprint
- Unofficial API (no rate limits or developer account required)
- AGPLv3 licensed, no proprietary instances permitted
- Dark theme
- Lightweight (for @nim_lang, 36KB vs 580KB from twitter.com)
Installation
You need to install nim on your system: https://nim-lang.org/install.html It is possible to install nim system wide or in the user directory you create below.
# useradd -m nitter
# su nitter
$ git clone https://github.com/zedeus/nitter
$ cd nitter
$ nimble build -d:release
$ mkdir ./tmp
To run nitter, execute ./nitter
. It's currently not possible to change any settings or things
like the title, this will change as the project matures a bit. For now the focus
is on implementing missing features.
You should put nitter behind a reverse proxy with e.g. nginx or apache.
It is also possible to run nitter via systemd:
[Unit]
Description=Nitter (An alternative Twitter front-end)
After=syslog.target
After=network.target
[Service]
Type=simple
# set user and group
User=nitter
Group=nitter
# configure location
WorkingDirectory=/home/nitter/nitter
ExecStart=/home/nitter/nitter/nitter
Restart=always
RestartSec=15
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
Then enable and start
systemctl enable --now nitter.service
Todo (roughly in this order)
- Search (images/videos, hashtags, etc.)
- Custom timeline filter
- More caching (waiting for moigagoo/norm#19)
- Simple account system with customizable feed
- Json API endpoints
- Themes
- Nitter logo
- Emoji support (WIP, uses native font for now)
Why?
It's basically impossible to use Twitter without JavaScript enabled. If you try, you're redirected to the legacy mobile version which is awful both functionally and aesthetically. For privacy-minded folks, preventing JavaScript analytics and potential IP-based tracking is important, but apart from using the legacy mobile version and a VPN, it's impossible. Using an instance of Nitter (hosted on a VPS for example), you can essentially browse Twitter without JavaScript, while retaining your privacy. In addition to respecting your privacy, Nitter is on average around 15 times lighter than Twitter, and in some cases serves pages faster. In the future a simple account system will be added that lets you follow Twitter users, allowing you to have a clean chronological timeline without needing a Twitter account.