• @TCB13
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    018 days ago

    I agree with you, but just think about this:

    signal, a truly secure messenger, will comply with data requests and will send the authorities everything they have about a user, which is really not that much to begin with.

    A govt asks Signal for info on a user, then Signal hands over a bunch of IP logs, metadata and a few encrypted messages that are still pending delivery or something on their servers.

    Do you remember the FBI vs Apple situation, they wanted backdoors / access to E2EE stuff and Apple was refusing to provide and they went against one of the largest tech companies out there. Do you really believe that the US govt just went after Apple but wouldn’t go after a small company like Signal? This looks shady - almost like there’s a security vulnerability / backdoor in Signal they can use whenever they want.

    Why would they go after the “not E2EE” chat but not after the “unbreakable and private” one? Telegram delivers trust, users trust that they won’t share any info to govts. Signal only delivers a promise that their E2EE will be enough to make the information govts get useless.

    This whole Telegram story is absolutely unrelated to chat control

    Chat control is exactly about baking backdoors and providing govts full access to chat logs etc. something that Telegram would never be okay with. They don’t even reply to govts requests most of the time, let alone be compromised at that level.

    • @[email protected]
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      918 days ago

      Signal only delivers a promise that their E2EE will be enough to make the information govts get useless.

      Signal do more than just a promise. Their encryption techniques are available to see. You can confirm if it’s enough protection for you or not. Telegram are the ones making a promise. I’m not saying they’ve broken their promise (as evidenced by the arrest).

      But it is just a promise when Telegram still has the ability to see messages. Signal can’t see messages and therefore don’t have to rely on a promise that can be broken (willingly or not). They instead rely on encryption, which appears to be far stronger than any promise could be.

      For all we know, this is performative and the French government already has access to Telegram’s servers and can see everything. If they have access to Signal’s, oh well, they can’t see shit.

      • @TCB13
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        -218 days ago

        Telegram are the ones making a promise. I’m not saying they’ve broken their promise (as evidenced by the arrest).

        The fact that govts go after them kinda validates the promise. Unlike Signal.

        • @[email protected]
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          718 days ago

          It validates that governments can see what’s happening on Telegram, and that makes Telegram a target.

          They can’t go after the likes of Signal because they have very little to go on in the first place. They can’t say definitively what’s happening there as they can’t see any messages. Unlike Telegram.

          It’s not a conspiracy that Signal are compromised, so they’re being ignored. They’re being ignored because there’s nothing to see, so governments might as well spend resources going after the apps where information is visible instead. At least they might get a result. E2EE apps are too difficult.

          • @[email protected]
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            116 days ago

            (Properly implemented E2EE is too difficult at the moment but those are some big caveats. Still: didn’t use Telegram.)

        • @Tangent5280
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          018 days ago

          If you aren’t going to turn out evil, raise your right hand.