Mobile App MVP Development on the People-First @platform: Project or Internship

Closed
Atsign
San Jose, California, United States
Denise Daniels
Head of Innovation & Partnerships
(6)
3
Preferred learners
  • Anywhere
  • Academic experience
Categories
Product or service launch Information technology
Skills
programming languages self-motivation flutter (software) react.js (javascript library) communication computer science javascript (programming language) zoom (video conferencing tool)
Project scope
What is the main goal for this project?

Come co-create the alternative Human-First Internet with The @ Company.

Let’s build an Internet where People, not Big Tech, call the shots.

Our organization is able to offer a virtual internship opportunity for 12 computer science students or teams.

Design and architect a mobile app on the Privacy-First Internet

  • Design and architect a privacy-conscious mobile app that is incredibly useful and ridiculously fun. Using Dart and Flutter, you’ll build your app on the @protocol, our open-source, Permissions-based protocol that makes end-to-end encryption and total security possible.

Who You Are:

  • You’re a self-starter with the desire to build your own app and bring it to market.
  • You’re a current college student or recent college graduate, ideally with a major in Computer Science or Entrepreneurship.
  • You have experience with one or more programming languages such as Javascript, React, or similar frameworks. Since our technology relies on Dart and Flutter, any Dart or Flutter knowledge is a plus.

We will plan to communicate with our virtual intern using these communication tools:

email: denise@atsign.com; discord, zoom, google chat

Please send a brief email to denise@atsign.com or call 650-868-3895 with your LinkedIn profile

About the company

We are internet optimists. We believe in the internet and all it has to offer. And, we want to make the internet better. How? Well, tech luminaries Kevin Nickels and Colin Constable decided to go to the core. They developed an open-source technology at the protocol level. No more client-server thinking, no more authentication nightmares and walled gardens, no more entering the same data ad nauseam into a data center owned by somebody else. With the atProtocol and your personal atSign, you get your own keys to your own datadom, your own micro-server, and a world of people-first apps where you mix and match them using your atSign to seamlessly move around the internet without being surveilled. Does that sound optimistic, or what?