Is it just me, or the government of India is cracking down of all end to end encryption apps like signal and element.

Cause I guy who works for the police came to my house and asked whether I use signal and element

  • @Ritsu4LifeOP
    link
    215 days ago

    Thanks for the comment. I haven’t found any local news for this. I may update this once I find any

    And for my story: A guy came from the police station he had a list all the people who were using "signal, element and bip (not open source, full of ads but encrypted) and a buch more end to end encrypted apps. Shown my mobile number, address and my name.

    Told me why I was using signal and element and also had to show my chats. Didn’t look at all the chats, was curious tho.

    Said that these apps were used by terrorist and all and you should switch to WhatsApp.

    WhatsApp runs India. It is a backbone all Indian users and it is also e2ee for all I know

    • Autonomous User
      link
      English
      16
      edit-2
      4 days ago

      Why I was using Signal

      WhatsApp, Instagram and Discord are used by terrorists, iOS and Windows too.

      Join the police. Make all your friends join the police. Report your new boss for terrorism.

    • Snot Flickerman
      link
      fedilink
      English
      23
      edit-2
      5 days ago

      That’s very curious. The push to WhatsApp is especially interesting considering it is owned by Meta/Facebook, which is a company that has a long history of working with the US government for extrajudicial surveillance of the US populace. I wonder if they’re working with the Indian government in a similar capacity.

      As such, I fully personally expect WhatsApp to have officially sanctioned government backdoors. If they’re willing to build them for the US government, maybe they’re building them for the Indian government, too. Which is perhaps why there is a push towards the corporate, non-open solution, because the other options have more ways for individuals to avoid backdoors.

      We really need more community owned and operated communications groups, like the barbed wire telephone of the past.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        74 days ago

        There could be another reason for pushing towards WhatsApp. If the police have operatives in anti government protest groups only on a single platform, they already know everyone in them via their phone numbers and can monitor them more easily. Signal in contrast has the option to hide your phone number and only expose a username to the public.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        24 days ago

        The only people I know who use WhatsApp are Indian. The only reason I have ever used WhatsApp is many of my Indian friends are unreachable by any normal means. And it was that way since before Meta ever bought them. If Modi tried to completely eliminate WhatsApp than people would be upset about it.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          2
          edit-2
          4 days ago

          WhatsApp is the most commonly used messaging app globally. What would be considered ‘normal’ means here? SMS or iMessage?

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            12 days ago

            Good point. I would consider SMS, MMS, Phone call & email “normal” but it woulda probably been better if I used a different term, maybe “long established protocols?”

    • ERROR: Earth.exe has crashed
      link
      fedilink
      English
      174 days ago

      Didn’t look at all the chats, was curious tho.

      Probably just skimmed through the group names looking for something like “Anti-Modi Protest Group”.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      105 days ago

      I wonder how they’d detect their usage. Signal is understandable, it has central servers (although I thought they were blocked and thus their usage wouldn’t be detectable under a good VPN anyway). But Matrix? Are they looking for connections to known public servers? Or the usage of the protocol itself stands out so that even selfhosted servers would stand out?

      If I were in such a situation, I’d start to hide traffic to anything they might dislike anyway.

    • Stewbs
      link
      24 days ago

      That is very concerning. I always chuckle to myself whenever I hear this “terrorist” pov thrown around. Like, okay? So many things are used by terrorists, let’s just ban them all! It’s like when a bill shows up in the US with the aim of “protecting children” (read: increasing surveillance and taking away your privacy)

      Btw if you don’t mind me asking, which state are you from? I’m from the North and I’ve not heard of this till now. Would love to know. Stay safe out there man, India is going through a lot of shit right now.