SEA.certify will replace the deprecated methods to enable others to write on your graph. SEA.certify
var Alice = await SEA.pair()
var Bob = await SEA.pair()
var Dave = await SEA.pair()
// Alice wants to allow Bob and Dave to use write to her "inbox" and "stories" UNTIL TOMORROW
// On Alice's side:
var certificate = await SEA.certify([Bob.pub, Dave.pub], [{"*": "inbox", "+": "*"}, {"*": "stories"}], Alice, null, {expiry: Gun.state()+(60*60*24*1000)})
// Now on Bob/Dave's side, they can write to Alice's graph using gun.put:
gun.get('~'+Alice.pub).get('inbox').get('deeper'+Bob.pub).put('hello world', null, {opt: {cert: certificate}}) // {opt: {cert: certificate}} is how you use Certificate in gun.put
On a related note, there are some other very useful encryption examples here.
For the sake of this answer I will post them:
1-to-1 encryption
///////////////////////////////////
// On my side - logged in as myself
///////////////////////////////////
var myPair = gun.user()._.sea;
// retrieve bob's user
const bob = gun.user(bobPublicKey);
// generate encryption secret using bob's epub and my pair
// this means only bob will be able to regenerate this secret with my pub key and his pair
const secret = await SEA.secret(bob.epub, myPair)
// encrypt the data using the secret
const encryptedData = await SEA.encrypt('private message for bob', secret);
////////////////////////////////////
// on Bob's side - logged in as Bob
///////////////////////////////////
const myPair = gun.user()._.sea;
// generate the secret - this will output the same secret generated by myself
// but this time we generate with bobs pair and my epub
const secret = await SEA.secret(myPair.epub, bob)
// just decrypt the data using the secret
const decryptedData = await SEA.decrypt(encryptedData, secret);
Multiple users encryption
(async () => {
  
  /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
  // Instead of logging in with actual users, we are 
  // going to generate SEA pairs which is basically the same thing
  /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
  
  // User 1 encrypts one message
  const user1 = await SEA.pair();
  
  const plainMessage = 'Hello, how are you?';
  const encryptionKey = 'this is my encryption key which is a normal string';
  const encryptedMessage = await SEA.encrypt(plainMessage, encryptionKey);
  
  // User 2, 3 and 4 will receive the message and decrypt it
  const user2 = await SEA.pair();
  const user3 = await SEA.pair();
  const user4 = await SEA.pair();
  
  // Each user gets an encrypted encryption key. If you print them, they all different
  const encryptedEncryptionKeyUser2 = await SEA.encrypt(encryptionKey, await SEA.secret(user2.epub, user1));
  const encryptedEncryptionKeyUser3 = await SEA.encrypt(encryptionKey, await SEA.secret(user3.epub, user1));
  const encryptedEncryptionKeyUser4 = await SEA.encrypt(encryptionKey, await SEA.secret(user4.epub, user1));
  
 
  // Each user decrypts his own encrypted encryption key
  // These three decrypted encryptions keys that we get are all the same
  const decryptedEncryptionKeyUser2 = await SEA.decrypt(
    encryptedEncryptionKeyUser2, 
    await SEA.secret(user1.epub, user2)
  );
  const decryptedEncryptionKeyUser3 = await SEA.decrypt(
    encryptedEncryptionKeyUser3, 
    await SEA.secret(user1.epub, user3)
  );
  const decryptedEncryptionKeyUser4 = await SEA.decrypt(
    encryptedEncryptionKeyUser4, 
    await SEA.secret(user1.epub, user4)
  );
  
  // Each user decrypts the encrypted message using the decrypted encryption key
  const decryptedMessageUser2 = await SEA.decrypt(encryptedMessage, decryptedEncryptionKeyUser2);
  const decryptedMessageUser3 = await SEA.decrypt(encryptedMessage, decryptedEncryptionKeyUser3);
  const decryptedMessageUser4 = await SEA.decrypt(encryptedMessage, decryptedEncryptionKeyUser4);
});