• @[email protected]
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    4 days ago

    Well let this be a lesson that encrypted messaging hosted on corporate servers is only encrypted as long as the authorities allow it.

    Also criminals gonna get in trouble.

    • @[email protected]
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      4 days ago

      Telegram isn’t encrypted. There’s an option but nobody uses it and doesn’t work in group chats.

      • poVoq
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        144 days ago

        This is false. There is still plenty of metadata that centralized providers can capture and turn over and that is usually sufficient for law-enforcement to get the information they want.

        • foremanguy
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          114 hours ago

          Right, WhatsApp is encrypted but not private at all. Reason? Metadatas, says as much as the message

        • @[email protected]
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          -24 days ago

          This is false. They cannot turn over any type of data that is encrypted. Metadata or otherwise. That’s the point of encryption.

          • poVoq
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            4 days ago

            Except that most of the metadata isn’t encrypted anywhere and usually also can’t be encrypted as otherwise the service wouldn’t be able to function.

              • poVoq
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                173 days ago

                You seem to be highly misinformed what metadata is. A server for example will always have access to unencrypted IP addresses from the clients connecting to it, this is impossible to avoid unless you use a service like Tor that relays internet traffic, but that has very little to do with “encryption”.

                • Fushuan [he/him]
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                  12 days ago

                  Another thing a server can easily access is the timestamp of messages. Even if that is somehow stored encrypted in the server, messages are sent in real time and the server can easily log those, so an e2e encryption chat service will at the very least have logs with IP and timestamps. This can’t really be avoided.

                • @[email protected]
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                  73 days ago

                  And even with Tor, if the person didn’t compartmentalize their conversations into different identities, they’d have the pseudonymous graph.

                • Brad Boimler
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                  33 days ago

                  According to signal facts all the have is your phone number and and the date you signed up for the service and the last day you connected to the server. IP address are not logged or stored the do t have access to it and signal has said this everytime the get a warrent for user data. So yes it is possible to have a secure service that doesn’t collect IP addresses but yes the do have some limited data so you are correct.

                  • poVoq
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                    3 days ago

                    That is all they claim to store for later retrival*, which is not the same as what they would be able to capture in real-time and hand over to law-enforcement if forced to by a court (and they wouldn’t be able to tell you about it because of a gag-order).

                    *However this claim is contradicted by the source-code of their server (which they sometimes publish) which seems to store significantly more and of course this is assuming the code is indeed the same as the one they run on their servers, which is unclear.

                    Edit: and their servers run on AWS, so even if Signal itself doesn’t store the IP addresses, Amazon certainly could.