• capital
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      67 days ago

      That’s kind of like if iMessage dropped SMS support. Yeah, I know if it’s a green bubble it’s not encrypted. But I wouldn’t want them to just not allow it.

    • @RubberElectrons
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      307 days ago

      Yeah, I’m one of em. I’m well aware it’s not secure, but as a frontend, signal certainly was more customizable and pleasant to use even for just the few people I had to sms till I could convince to use signal.

      • @[email protected]
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        36 days ago

        I agree that it helped with adoption. In a way I wish they still had it so I could get my text messaging family to use a messaging app instead.

        The flip side was, if somebody tried signal and didn’t like it and uninstalled it, then any SMS message to them from signal went to their signal account that they no longer had installed so they didn’t get it. You had no way of knowing so it really sucked.

        • @RubberElectrons
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          16 days ago

          Ah yeah, I’d forgotten about that.

          I’m certain the engineering team considered it, but I wonder why they didn’t pursue having accounts that haven’t signed in for a while issue a notice to the sender, or even have the account deactivate itself.

          Make an opt-out default, you could disable that behaviour if your threat model needed to account for that 🤷

      • warm
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        217 days ago

        It was so much easier to convince people to use Signal when it had SMS support. I think while Signal needed to drop it, it wasn’t the time yet.

        • @RubberElectrons
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          147 days ago

          I’m not convinced it ever should’ve. Make it obvious sms mode is in use, etc etc. But it was great to have everything in one place. One blocklist, great photo editing etc

          • warm
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            47 days ago

            Maybe. For me the worst change they made was removing custom colours for my contacts.

    • @[email protected]
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      77 days ago

      I am one of those. I ditched Signal and went back to the stock sms app and adopted matrix. Haven’t looked back since. The reality is that Signal dropping support for sms wasn’t going to stop me from using SMS. For that, other people need to be convinced to stop using it at the same time. Signal didn’t have nearly the market size needed to make that happen. And now that card is played, and nothing has changed. Signal is just another messaging app among hundreds. At least matrix offers a real paradigm shift.

      • @[email protected]
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        -127 days ago

        signal and matrix are both CIA. i’d say it’s worse for your privacy than using your standard messengers since they know that’s where all the juicy stuff is.

          • @[email protected]
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            16 days ago

            Per their website

            The Matrix.org Foundation C.I.C is registered in the UK as Company #11648710

            Afaik UK != Israel. Like sure they may work together, but I’m pretty sure they’re different countries, meaning Matrix is British, so it would be MI6. Of course, being that they’re

            an open protocol for decentralised, secure communications,

            I doubt it’s MI6 as well, and if it is find the back door in it for us all by having the open source code audited, please and thank you.

            Btw this applies to “The Matrix Foundation,” they’re just the devs and run the largest instance, other instances (especially if you self host) are run by “not them” anyway.

            • @[email protected]
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              6 days ago

              No Matrix was invented by an Israeli company.

              Matrixis an open-sourced protocol developed in 2014 by a team then working for Amdocs — an Israeli communication company. The standard is based on HTTP (to facilitate messages) and WebRTC (to facilitate voice calls). It works on a decentralized model with any compatible client.

        • @[email protected]
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          27 days ago

          Lol apparently the juicy stuff is every meme my friends have shared with each other for the last several years