How do notifications work in the official Telegram Android app (Play Store vs Site version maybe)? Does it have the same mechanism as Signal, which only recognizes the presence of notifications via Google services, but sends them via its web socket service?

    • @rdri
      link
      111 months ago

      And why should I accept your reframing when you try to compare signal to telegram?

      I see, signal wants to keep its servers free from content. Cool. This automatically means groups can’t accept new members and allow them seeing all the previously posted content. This is what protests use to grow. So signal can’t be used to grow protest groups. Only fixed groups would use it to do stuff they want, and “making more people join the protest” would not be on list. They will need to resort to other methods to spread infornation if they wanted to grow. Protesters groups that don’t want to grow are not what I could consider a real protest.

      Protest is a public movement. It will not be effective when it’s private or wants to keep its members anonymous. This is basically what oppressive governments are fine with, so signal helps them in a way.

      What led to telegram’s “wrongdoings” would not be possible if it did not provide public communication. Signal doesn’t provide it either so they’d have to use a different platform. That would lead to the same consequences.

      Affected people could use private groups in telegram to avoid issues. But then it would not be what they wanted, and their actions would not be impactful enough (without other platform capable of public communication) for government to get interested in them.

        • @rdri
          link
          111 months ago

          Sure you can grow groups in Signal.

          Up until you allow to join that one member that will leak every single thing you wanted to keep private.

          But giving law enforcement first-class access to groups helps them avoid law enforcement how?

          Not sure my English skill is enough to understand this sentence.

          Who exactly gave anyone first class access to anything?

          And no, private groups in Telegram are still fully visible to the state-supporting Telegram corporate employees.

          This is like saying that an email provider has access to your emails. Not even trying to argue with the rest of implications. So what? You’re still avoiding the point. No service can protect you from the real world. You must avoid real world issues yourself. By either using private features of apps, or by not participating in public communication, or by using apps that prevent you from participating in public communication etc.

          Someone cut a hand with a saw when cutting a board. You saw that and thought “that saw manufacturer is at fault, I’d better use a saw from another manufacturer”. What’s happening really is you choosing a knife over a saw. Also it’s very probable that people like you are not ever going to try to cut a board. That’s what choosing signal looks like to me. I’m not judging you for choosing a knife or for avoiding boards, but it’s worth it to understand the differences.