Protocols/OSCAR: Difference between revisions

From NINA Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{DISPLAYTITLE:OSCAR Protocol Documentation}}
{{FULLPAGENAME:OSCAR Protocol Documentation}}


OSCAR stands for "Open System for Communication in Realtime", and while originally and ironically was not open, today it is. Originally used by AOL's AIM and ICQ products, but later discontinued, it now has had a rebirth of sorts and is used by third party services.
OSCAR stands for "Open System for Communication in Realtime", and while originally and ironically was not open, today it is. Originally used by AOL's AIM and ICQ products, but later discontinued, it now has had a rebirth of sorts and is used by third party services.


Sometimes, inaccurately, within the ICQ community it's called "protocol v7/8/9" but this is inaccurate. Additionally the newer [[web-based Protocols/API|API]] has been called ICQ v10 by a few. These version numbers are not accurate and typically come from the rendezvous/direct connection protocol version numbers.
Sometimes, inaccurately, within the ICQ community it's called "protocol v7/8/9" but this is inaccurate. Additionally the newer [[Protocols/API|web-based API]] has been called ICQ v10 by a few. These version numbers are not accurate and typically come from the rendezvous/direct connection protocol version numbers.

Revision as of 22:23, 17 May 2019

OSCAR Protocol Documentation

OSCAR stands for "Open System for Communication in Realtime", and while originally and ironically was not open, today it is. Originally used by AOL's AIM and ICQ products, but later discontinued, it now has had a rebirth of sorts and is used by third party services.

Sometimes, inaccurately, within the ICQ community it's called "protocol v7/8/9" but this is inaccurate. Additionally the newer web-based API has been called ICQ v10 by a few. These version numbers are not accurate and typically come from the rendezvous/direct connection protocol version numbers.