• dinckel
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    1201 year ago

    I admire their dedication, but at the same time strongly disagree with asking people to pay money for a service, that’s fundamentally based on a hole in a reverse engineered protocol. They won’t win this

    • doc
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      1 year ago

      They’re doing more than riding on apples services for free. They had to build and run a notification relay server to make this work.

      Same thing that’s been in the news about Apple sharing info with police. The content of the messages are ETE encrypted but notifications of who is talking to who is not

      • @zeppo
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        1 year ago

        My objection wouldn’t be that they didn’t put in enough effort, because it was clearly a lot, but that the service is a doomed idea.

      • 𝕽𝖔𝖔𝖙𝖎𝖊𝖘𝖙
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        1 year ago

        Same thing that’s been in the news about some sharing info with police. The comment of the messages are ete encrypted but notifications of who is talking to who is not

        Beeper Mini’s GCM server only handles a “new message waiting” trigger, it doesn’t contain any private data like who the message is from or its contents, just that a new message is available.

    • 𝕽𝖔𝖔𝖙𝖎𝖊𝖘𝖙
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      1 year ago

      I’m happy to pay to support them.

      If you’d rather not pay the Beeper Cloud service is free and all of the matrix bridges it uses are open source.

      The source code behind how Beeper Mini works is available as well but will require a client of some sort to be written since you can’t just use a matrix bridge and a matrix app.

      The guy who started Beeper also created the Pebble Watch and they have always maintained open source alternatives for their bridges.

      I’m just happy that a company with those ethics is the one to take up this fight against Apple, this could have been a $10/month app from a company who believes in closed source and pushing ads/tracking users’ data.

      Beeper is a good company that actually cares about privacy and security and that should be commended.

    • @[email protected]
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      131 year ago

      You should look at american legal precedent surrounding reverse engineering. Legally speaking, it’s quite hopeful.

    • kick_out_the_jams
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      1 year ago

      If the open source community could provide such a thing for free I think they would have done it already?

      But presumably they lack the ability, the motivation or both.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      I wouldn’t mind paying $2 a month for Beeper. I’ve been using it for months to consolidate all of my messaging apps. It’s worth $2 a month for me. Beeper Mini is just iMessage, so I don’t know if it’s worth it for me. They said they’ll eventually move all of the other chat services over to Beeper Mini, at which point it will just be Beeper.

  • southsamurai
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    351 year ago

    There’s zero sense in charging anyone anything until apple decides to not find ways to block it. If there’s going to be a cat and mouse game going on, the product isn’t going to be stable enough to be worth using, so only die-hards are going to be willing to pay anything to begin with.

    Them getting shut down so fast is not making them look reliable at all

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      The only way Beeper can make this work is to make it literally indistinguishable from a real Apple device, one that’s recent enough that Apple can’t simply drop it out of support. Seems unlikely but I’ve got popcorn so I hope they keep at it.

      • @itscozydownhere
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        31 year ago

        Their idea was based on reverse engineering Apple. How could they have thought it would have kept working. Bad business idea IMO

  • @devfuuu
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    -51 year ago

    For people out of the loop what is this about? Is a new whatsapp clone being released? I read something about apple blocking something but don’t understand what’s going on.

    • capital
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      131 year ago

      I find that, generally, reading is conducive to absorbing information I want to have.

    • @drislands
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      101 year ago

      I agree with the other commenter in general but I’ll give you the bullet points.

      Old news:

      • iMessage is a proprietary chat protocol that only works on Apple devices. Apple has indicated multiple times they have zero intention of porting this to other platforms
      • Apple users texting each other default to iMessage
      • iMessage has a lot of useful features over SMS texting that are highly desirable and convenient
      • On iPhones, when iMessages are being successfully sent in a text, the chat bubbles are blue. If they are SMS, they are green
      • The US additionally has a weird culture of some iPhone users shaming Android users because of the inability to communicate via iMessage, often referred to by the green/blue bubble appearance
      • There have been a few attempts to circumvent this, mostly by having a Mac somewhere with software installed to it that forwards iMessages to your Android device, though this is extremely cumbersome as it requires having an entire computer on 24/7 to make sure you receive these messages

      New news:

      • Beeper Mini was released earlier this week, which actually runs a reverse-engineered iMessage client that tricks Apple servers into treating it like an Apple device
      • It was fully functional for about one day with almost all iMessage features working
      • Apple made some variety of change on their end that broke Beeper Mini functionality

      And that’s about it. For those of us that would like to have easy communication with our iPhone-using friends and family, yet don’t want to change phone ecosystems to do so, this is a problem that would be awesome to see solved.

      There are folks that, either because of ignorance or pigheadedness, like to chime in on these threads that they don’t care about having blue bubbles. That is the least important aspect of this to most people following this, for the reasons I mentioned above.

      • @devfuuu
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        1 year ago

        Thanks. That helps a lot. I never knew that iMessages was integrated with sms, just thought it existed as a internet protocol like many other proprietary ones.

        Basically it’s all the same usual problem of using a closed proprietary chat protocol that a single stake holder has the power to change however and whenever they want.

        Like whatsap, facebook and others which any alternative has to keep catching up to the changes that the companies do and which is very hard to maintain the reverse engineered protocols.

        It never crossed my mind that I don’t usually see alternative clients for imessage, but makes sense, didn’t think it would be so hard to do.

        So these guys came up with a implementation that works and apple just wants to crush them to destroy any alternatives. Business as usual.

        It’s hard to understand these news when all the lingo used implies you already know the thing being talked about. An article talking about “Blue bubbles” makes no sense whatsoever to anyone not used to apple ecosystem.