• @catalog3115
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    717 months ago

    I still stand with Signal App.

    • Telegram has no default E2EE.
    • Threema’s encryption was compromised .
    • Threema & Telegram both are for profit companies.
    • Signal is non-profit & all their source code + finances are public. Even their server codes are publically available
    • @FutileRecipe
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      87 months ago

      Even their server codes are publicly available

      Last I checked, their provided server code lags behind their production server, so you rarely get to see the current version. However, that’s kinda the point of E2EE, is you don’t have to trust the server.

  • Possibly linux
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    457 months ago

    I can’t believe people are saying Telegram and Threema might be better than Signal. Signal isn’t perfect but Telegram and Threema are worse.

    • Autonomous User
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      7 months ago

      Because we keep saying Signal, Telegram, Threema instead of Anti-Libre Software, Service as a Software Substitute and Centralised.

    • @[email protected]
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      37 months ago

      It really depends on your use case. Most of my simple chat messages are the same as I would have in any public space. I have no need for encryption, I have need for convenience in that regard. With Telegram I have my chat history on all devices and don’t need to use my phone to connect which are two must-haves for me. For my use case, Signal is the worse option. That doesn’t make Signal bad, just not suitable for me.

      As a privacy-concious person I am very much aware of the non-secure nature of my chats, but since that is not a factor of consideration to me when it comes to casual chats with a few friends and family members. The worst thing Telegram could do is analyse my chats and … then what?

    • @rdri
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      -37 months ago

      Signal is not applicable when you need a public space for people to just have a discussion, like in discord. Signal clients are clunky and rely on cross sync from what I see, while telegram clients are well made and convenient to use. Even Whatsapp went away from electron so I’d choose it over signal any day.

      • Kilgore Trout
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        97 months ago

        Have you tried Signal recently? On Android it’s very well polished.

        In fact I believe it’s a shame that not more people use such a beautiful app, regardless of privacy and security implications.

        • @rdri
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          -17 months ago

          I have no use for it for now and as long as it’s still electron on desktop I don’t want to have it running.

      • @[email protected]
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        46 months ago

        Signal clients are clunky

        Obviously you have never used Element for matrix. Signal is like a Ferrari in comparison.

        • @rdri
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          06 months ago

          Yeah I’ve never used matrix really.

      • Possibly linux
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        07 months ago

        Matrix would work for that and would avoid proprietary software and sketchy companies

        • @rdri
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          27 months ago

          Does it sync automatically between desktop and mobile? Can I share an image into it on mobile and have it a few seconds later on laptop?

          • Possibly linux
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            7 months ago

            Yes, just keep in mind the encryption is flaky if you use a browser that clears browsing data. Best option is to use a client

        • @[email protected]
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          16 months ago

          sketchy companies

          I would argue that the standard federation fragmentation issues still apply. Many instances end up defederating from each other and you have no idea which wind you’re pissing into.

        • @[email protected]
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          6 months ago
          1. The Encryption algorithm of Signal is basically the same algorithms proposed by the US gov in 2000. There is no way they would release these encryption algorithms if they couldn’t break them themsleves
          2. If you would see which organisations are supporting Signal (look at where Signal gets all the money), you would also agree with me. There is no way these organasations are supporting them for your privacy. Why would they? The same people who are trying their best to get all your data. Believing this is just pure naivity imo but call me what you want
          • @[email protected]
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            76 months ago

            Please stop spreading FUD.

            1. The encryption used by Signal would not be used if it could be easily broken. It’s fully open source and is regularly audited. People would not recommend it if it were so broken like you say; this is just fearmongering.

            2. lol, lmao even

            • @[email protected]
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              -36 months ago

              I’m not forcing you to believe anything. Also this is a free platform where I can say what I think. I won’t hold myself back from expressing my view only because the majority has a different opinikn (looking at the downvotes). I personally just wouldn’t trust it. And it also doesn’t have any difference to Whatsapp and co. (encryprion algos are the same) which completely removes the purpose of it even existing (ik open source is still an argument. But they don’t have reproducable builds so even that falls apart) so there really isn’t any reason for me to switch to it or promote it to anybody at all.

  • ᴅᴜᴋᴇᴛʜᴏʀɪᴏɴ
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    367 months ago

    Man, everyone is hopping on the Trash Signal Bandwagon, even though TG is less secure, and nobody (the 99%) uses Threema.

    • Autonomous User
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      7 months ago

      It’s called disinformation and psychological warfare. How else attack E2EE, libre software?

    • @[email protected]
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      27 months ago

      I’m wondering if something interesting will fall off the truck this time :D

      Context: before that blogpost, cellebrite claimed they can “hack” signal (or they were kinda closer to the truth, and that was media talking abt hacks without reading stuff)

  • @[email protected]
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    6 months ago

    Let’s be honest, Signal is not perfect either:

    • It requires your phone number
    • It has had some suspicious funding sources
      (UPD: It was funded by CIA)
      (UPD2: Here I will quote www.securemessagingapps.com:

    This matters because “money talks”, as the saying goes. If the company or person behind the money is likely to have reason not to protect customers’ privacy, it’s important to know. This could be indicative of the company not doing as they say (Google, Whatsapp, for example) or changing their mind once they’ve onboarded enough customers from whom they can make money.

    (I’m gonna find sources for the last two statements a bit later to not be unsubstantiated)
    Done.

    Although, we all can agree, that Signal is still better than Telegram, or WhatsApp, or Threema, or whatever.
    Still, we probably want to look at the better alternatives, like Simplex or Session.

    • @[email protected]
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      6 months ago

      Session is also sus because you effectively cannot host a node, last I have seen. They claim it is “against a Sybil attack” but all it does is making sure only people wih large disposable funds can have nodes, and the effect might be the exact opposite.

      Simplex is more interesting in this regard because while I am concerned with initial centralization (the default servers), they made hosting your own easy. But I personally stick with imperfect yet trusty XMPP.

      • Brayd
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        26 months ago

        SimpleX is great. BUT it’s not user friendly. Thus general adoption for the average user will be hard. Don’t get me wrong using the app itself is easy but as soon as someone switches their phone that doesn’t have technical knowledge they will loose their chats because they won’t understand the concept of moving their DB. Since you don’t have an identifier like a phone number with SimpleX those people could even lose contacts as a whole since they generate a new DB, hurting their social connections.

        That’s the reason I personally never recommend SimpleX to anyone who doesn’t have the technical knowledge to understand stuff like that.

    • @[email protected]
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      86 months ago

      It has had some suspicious funding sources

      Wait until you find out where computers, the Internet, GPS, weather satellites and Tor came from.

    • Autonomous User
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      7 months ago

      suspicious funding

      Which lines of its libre software source code are malicious?

      requires your phone number

      It’s centralised

      • @[email protected]
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        27 months ago

        Which lines of its libre software source code are malicious?

        It’s not about code, but about funding.

        It’s centralised

        Yes, and it’s the downside, no matter how you look at it.

        • Autonomous User
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          7 months ago

          So, which malicious lines of libre software source code have been funded? This is how we stop FUD. Don’t let them derail us.

          • @[email protected]
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            -17 months ago

            Don’t get me wrong. As far as we know, no malicious code have been funded. The very fact that the Signal was sponsored by the CIA is suspicious (maybe I used some incorrect words, sorry if so). Of course, it’s totally up to you whether you think that fact is sus or not.

            • Autonomous User
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              37 months ago

              It’s not. Our devices run software, not funding.

    • @[email protected]
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      57 months ago

      Telegram requires a phone number too? I mean yeah there’s the option to use that blockchain phone number service, but you can do the same for Signal. 🤷

    • @[email protected]
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      57 months ago
      • It requires your phone number

      Not anymore, right? Or does it still need your number for signing up?

    • @[email protected]
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      7 months ago

      Signal no longer requires a phone number. You can now create an account. Not sure if that helps your outlook on it, but yeah. It was a fairly recent update that this was rolled out.

      Edit: being told we still do need numbers to register. I haven’t gotten a new phone since well before the change was made, so I haven’t actually created an account and gone through the process. It looks like I misinterpreted what was going on when I read the changelog.

      • @[email protected]
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        7 months ago

        That’s not true. A phone number is still required to register, you can just set it not to be public.

        Source: I just tried to register and it asked for my phone number.

      • @[email protected]
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        67 months ago

        Last I have seen, it still requires a number to register - it just doesn’t have to be public.

        What gets me the most is the requirement of a smartphone to register. No way I am trusting my non-public chats to a phone, so that means either Waydroid/VM (which creates issues with copypasting) or signal-cli (which is fairly inconvenient).

  • Autonomous User
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    7 months ago
    • Discord/WhatsApp
      • Anti-Libre Software (fails to include AGPL license file: bans us from removing malicious source code) 🚩🚩🚩
    • Telegram/Threema
      • Libre Software ✅
      • Service as a Software Substitute (app needs service and we are missing server software for it: broken app) 🚩🚩
    • Signal
      • Libre Software ✅
      • Self-Hosting (still needs service from us) ☑️
      • Centralised 🚩

    Needs phone number Centralised
    Suspicious funding Which lines of its libre software source code are malicious?

      • Autonomous User
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        7 months ago

        Yes, app does not work without service and we are missing server software to serve this service it needs: broken app. Threema is SaaSS.

      • Brayd
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        16 months ago

        The server / backend is not open source. Even though it’s audited that’s a red flag.

        • Autonomous User
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          6 months ago

          ‘Open source’ misses the point of libre software.

  • @[email protected]
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    176 months ago

    Signal is currently the best middleground between security, simplicity and widespread adoption.

    • Dessalines
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      137 months ago

      I don’t get it at all. There are plenty of platforms like matrix, xmpp, simplex that don’t require phone numbers tied to your identity. Signal has somehow managed to convince people that it’s a private platform, despite it being a US hosted service that requires phone numbers.

      • @[email protected]
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        Who have they convinced that it is private? I think it has more to do with the overall purpose of the platform. Signal is not made for large group chatting with strangers like Matrix.

      • @[email protected]
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        16 months ago

        Say the US government, in a worst-case scenario in which it constantly monitors all traffic that goes through Signal’s data centers, can ‘only’ see phone numbers, IP addresses and timestamps, right? Or am I forgetting something here?

        • Dessalines
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          Metadata and social graphs are more important than message content, esp since not many people have the time to read through individual messages to build meaning.

          Signal stores phone numbers (meaning your identity, and home address), and message timestamps: who texted who and when, and who’s in chats with who else. More than enough to build social graphs and connections, and also figure out where people are through their IP addresses.

          • Brayd
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            26 months ago

            Signal can’t see who is texting who. They can’t see which groups you are part of. Those information are end to end encrypted, same as your chats itself, your profile picture, your stories, etc.

            Signal doesn’t store message timestamps either.

            What Signal itself knows of you is your phone number, the timestamp of your registration, the timestamp of your last connection to the server. That’s it.

            Yes metadata is critical but Signal handles metadata very well. Indeed, even though I’m a fan of Matrix, better than Matrix. Matrix is a metadata nightmare due to it’s centralized structure and the way the protocol works.

            • Dessalines
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              36 months ago

              Signal can’t see who is texting who. They can’t see which groups you are part of. Those information are end to end encrypted, same as your chats itself, your profile picture, your stories, etc.

              This is completely false. They can absolutely see who is texting who, in fact they need it to be able to route messages. They have message timestamps, and phone numbers stored in their database.

              Question, why do you “trust” signal? You can’t see what code their centralized server is running, unlike matrix which you can self-host and build from source. You don’t have to “trust” matrix, you can verify it for yourself.

              • Brayd
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                06 months ago

                Signals server is open source. You can run a server. You just can’t connect to the main net because each server is it’s own thing so it doesn’t make sense besides for development purposes.

                Please don’t spread misinformation.

                • Dessalines
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                  06 months ago

                  They went over a year without publishing their server updates. And how do you know signal is running the code they say they are? Do you trust them?

          • @[email protected]
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            26 months ago

            Right. So arguably better than WhatsApp, where each users’ contact books, profile photos, bios, and each group chat name, picture and description is not E2E. But to call it ‘private’ is not logical, looking at the alternatives, of which some are much more private.

            • Dessalines
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              16 months ago

              Yes, but I don’t think user metadata outside of your apub url, name, icon, display name, leaves your homeserver. Email or passwords don’t leave iirc.

  • @[email protected]
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    67 months ago

    both suck when it comes to real hardcore privacy! Signal is surely a bit more private/secure/whatever, unless maybe you count in the US jurisdiction.

    if you want hardcore privacy and security, use SimpleX. it’s cutting edge.

    • Autonomous User
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      When it’s anti-libre software, why waste our time showing it fails everything else. These pages are trash, too verbose.

      • @[email protected]
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        47 months ago

        Doing thorough analysis and discussing all the nuance and tradeoffs is “trash”? That is a difficult way to live your life, being anti-intellectualist.

        • Autonomous User
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          17 months ago

          That’s a great way to spread a multiplayer app.

          • @[email protected]
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            I don’t understand your response in the context of refusing to do comparative analysis

  • Detective'
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    47 months ago

    Nicely written article and a good read! However I had not heard of Threema before. It looks like a promising messaging app itself, anyone use it?

    • poVoq
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      97 months ago

      It’s relatively popular in DACH countries.

      I use it sometimes. It has its fair share of issues, and the back end is not open-source, but it is OK for the most part. Main benefit is that you don’t need a mobile number to sign up.

      But if you are looking for an alternative IM to use with friends and family, I would rather suggest XMPP, specifically Snikket.

    • @[email protected]
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      47 months ago

      I am using it to communicate with 3 people (our common ground as I don’t have an iPhone and don’t use Whatsapp).

      A few years ago it felt a bit ruff and awkward to use, but many updates later it is as fluent as any chat app.

      The security feels ok. Of course it would be a lot better, if they would open source their code.

  • Chemical Wonka
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    6 months ago

    I use Signal as my main daily messenger the two major problems in my opinion are:

    1. Centralized server (AWS)
    2. Requires a phone number to register