• @[email protected]
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      381 year ago

      While it’s a good solution, it is entirely untrue. A message is either End to End Encrypted or it is not. If the message is decrypted at any point between the sender and the intended recipient, it is definitively not End to End Encrypted.

    • @[email protected]
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      241 year ago

      E2EE means it’s End-to-End Encrypted. If it’s decrypted at any point during transit then it’s by definition not E2EE and Beeper shouldn’t be making that claim.

    • Skull giver
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      1 year ago

      [This comment has been deleted by an automated system]

    • @SuddenlyBlowGreen
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      1 year ago

      It’s E2EE from the sender to your Beeper server, where it’s decrypted, then re-encypted as a Matrix message.

      Then it’s not E2E encrypted.

      One end is your device, the other end is the other device. It’s only E2E encrypted if it is not decrypted until it reaches the other device.

        • @Spedwell
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          71 year ago

          Sticking two E2EE tunnels together with a plaintext middleman doesn’t result in a single E2EE tunnel.

          The reason the distinction is important is because the security profile is vastly different—a compromised server leads to a compromised message—which isn’t true for actual E2EE services like a pure Matrix link.

          Side note: the first thing you should ask of a “end-to-end encrypted” product to you is “which ‘ends’ do you mean?” I’ve seen TLS advertised as E2EE before.

          • @Spedwell
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            1 year ago

            Adding: TLS is actually a pretty apt analogy here.

            You could make a chat server that just accepts plain text messages over a TLS link, and that’s basically the same security topology as with this Beeper bridge.

            But no one would call that a E2EE chat.