• Hot Saucerman
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    1 year ago

    If you trust Telegram you’re naive. Here is a great breakdown earlier this year from Kaspersky.

    https://usa.kaspersky.com/blog/telegram-why-nobody-uses-secret-chats/27662/

    Signal isn’t perfect either, but their mistakes are far less egregious. They also have removed some of the more egregious mistakes, like needing a phone number (edit: incorrect, see below) or google play services to function. It can be run on a device without Google Play Services because it only uses Google Play Services for push notifications.

    • plz1
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      111 year ago

      Since when does Signal not require a phone number?

      • Hot Saucerman
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        91 year ago

        Earlier this year. It no longer functions as an SMS service and you now have a username instead. I think the changeover was in March or April.

        • quaff
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          231 year ago

          Hm? Not sure which Signal you’re using. But it very much still requires a phone number to use. Usernames are not available just yet. There’s activity related to usernames in the GitHub repository, but no release yet.

          They did remove the ability to send and receive SMS from their Android app. That was about last year or so.

          https://signal.org/blog/sms-removal-android/

        • @Rwaterhouse@lemmy.world
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          61 year ago

          Usernames have not been released yet. When they are released, phone number will still be required for registration, but you will be able to hide it from other people on Signal.

        • plz1
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          31 year ago

          I knew about the SMS thing (Android only), but thought they had yet to release user names as a feature. I see no settings related to user names on iOS. The SMS retirement was to remove the ability to use Signal to replace an SMS app on Android.

          • Hot Saucerman
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            31 year ago

            Forgive me, you’re correct. I stopped using it when it dropped SMS, because I had only ever able to get people on it through SMS, but at the time had read plans about eventually dropping the phone number requirement. I mixed those things up in my head.

            From what I understand, they’re fully invested in dropping the phone number requirement though, and some more googling says that they’ve had versions of Signal PNP (phone number privacy) running for a while now.

            You’re correct, that part hasn’t actually changed over yet, but it’s in the works.

            • plz1
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              31 year ago

              It is planned, and “in the works” for at least two years at this point. It’ll happen, eventually.

            • @Rwaterhouse@lemmy.world
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              31 year ago

              They do not at this time intend to drop the phone number requirement, as they see it as an anti-spam measure. Meredith Whittaker has said as much. Phone number privacy is a project independent of requiring phone number at signup, and it just prevents other users from seeing your number.

            • @bastion@feddit.nl
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              21 year ago

              Hehe! I was just bitching about them dropping SMS (and a crapton of users) in another post.

              It used to be the perfect app to get people into secure messaging. Now it’s just another chat app to most people, who tend to think “who really cares when you’ve got WhatsApp etc, that actually have users? Why would I want some obscure app on my phone? More shit to think about.”

        • asudox
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          11 year ago

          Usernames still aren’t a thing. What are you talking about?

    • quaff
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      81 year ago

      Thanks for the article. That’s a really good breakdown for most arguments of Telegram propagandists. 🙌

    • @Oisteink@feddit.nl
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      21 year ago

      No idea how they use GPS for push messages, but is the thing that you need to select encrypted chat and that it’s not e2ee otherwise?

      • Hot Saucerman
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        41 year ago

        GPS was short for Google Play Services, not Global Positioning System. Sorry.

        Signal is always encrypted by default. Same with Matrix. Telegram you have to choose for it to be an encrypted chat, and you can’t do encrypted group chats.

  • @AllNewTypeFace@leminal.space
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    401 year ago

    Telegram is, by all accounts, a privacy garbage fire. They rolled their own crypto, bless them, and as they say, anyone can design a cryptosystem that they themselves can’t break.

  • @FrankTheHealer@lemmy.world
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    281 year ago

    Signal every time.

    Session and Threema seem to be coming along too, but I’m quite happy with Signal as my go to messaging service for now.

    I like the work they do, and the head of the Signal Foundation, Meredith Whitaker, seems very level headed and passionate about their mission.

    My only concern with Signal is how they will be able to keep the lights on long term. Either they will continuously need bailouts from billionaire benefactors, or they’ll have to monetize the shit out of their branding, with merch, a Patreon, probably some kind of ads and pushing even more for donations and fundraising. I hope I’m wrong but I have a feeling I’m not.

    • @LastYearsPumpkin@feddit.ch
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      41 year ago

      It’s a not for profit, so they don’t need to rake in dough, just need to keep functioning, which isn’t a ton of cash for a messaging service. Wikipedia does just fine with donations, and they serve far more people.

      I donate every month, and I bet there’s enough that do to keep running like they are.

    • @shrugal@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      I love Signal, but at the end of the day they still operate a centralized service with all the drawbacks that entails. It only takes a change of leadership to kick of progressive enshitification, just look at what happened to WhatsApp. Being run by a non-profit should help, but the chance always exists with centralized control. Also their multi-device support is still not great, no official support for Android tablets for example. And idk why not, because Molly (Signal fork) recently added that without too much difficulty afaik.

      Session looks really interesting imo, kinda like a decentralized and multi-device version of Signal.

    • @Tibert@jlai.lu
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      21 year ago

      Last time I used adguard, they seemed to want to get money from user donations. By having more users, more users would donate, and there would be a point where there would be enough.

      Tho I’m not sure if they have reached such point or if they would reach it in the future.

  • @Scolding7300@lemmy.world
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    221 year ago

    Answer: Signal

    I wish people would use Signal, but Telegram is the closest thing to a sane privacy policy I’ve got. There are a few that luckily agreed to use Signal.

    Waiting on interoperability, see how that’s implemented in Signal+WhatsApp (hopefully with Telegram to so I can ditch that).

    • @redditReallySucks@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      41 year ago

      I’m also using telegram but I don’t trust it. It’s made by two Russian brothers who are fleeing from every country in the world. A bit to sketchy in my opinion.

      • @Scolding7300@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        Don’t trust them either but that’s sometimes a good sign. It’s been used for illegal activities using a 3rd party client for a while in one country that I know of, which oddly enough makes me a little more comfortable. Or at least that country just couldn’t get access to the data

      • @Scolding7300@lemmy.world
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        11 year ago

        IMO I’d rather have that and have them clearly say they’re not using it for anything than potentially be profiled on WhatsApp where my friends keyboards are spying on their end in terms of content, i.e. be plugged into a social network with half the conversation exposed that way.

        I say sane in comparison to that.

        Granted these are my own concerns

          • @Scolding7300@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Wdym? I was under the impression that the Google native/default keyboard on Android feeds some stuff to their ad-related dataset

            • @vrighter@discuss.tchncs.de
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              11 year ago

              do you change keyboards for different apps? The keyboard itself is a separate app. Switching whatsapp for telegram (of all things) means you switched the messaging app. You did not switch the keyboard app too.

              So if you think your keyboard is spying on you, that has absolutely nothing to do with messaging apps. At all

              • @Scolding7300@lemmy.world
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                11 year ago

                I see the confusion, what I meant to say their keyboard is spying on them which includes their part of my conversation with them. Having an app broadcast the metadata of the conversations (whatsapp) + a keyboard spying on them = me getting profiled, somewhat.

                Although Meta tries to go Apple’s way and not share data (likewise for Google, iirc)

    • @aksdb@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      As long as Signal requires my phone number, it’s a hard NO for me. I don’t care how good they encrypt if the first thing they do is require one of my most personal identifiers.

      Threema has a very good model in that regard.

        • pflanzenregal
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          31 year ago

          You’ll be able to connect with people by giving out your username instead of your phone number. You will however still be required to register using your phone number, if I’m not completely mistaken.

          So you can buy a burner phone (number) to receive the registration code and you’re good. Perhaps need to keep the number for migrating to new phone though.

    • iesou
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      21 year ago

      Maybe check out beeper? I’m not sure if it has Telegram integration but it works with WhatsApp and Signal as well as Matrix iMessage and others

  • Sphere
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    191 year ago

    Signal. Also, the solution to the “no-one on signal” problem is simply to refuse to use insecure platforms like WhatsApp. If people want to talk to you then, they have to download signal. They might get annoyed with you, but sometimes a bit of coercion is necessary to get people to do what’s good for them.

  • @quellik@lemmy.ml
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    161 year ago

    I use both but for different purposes: Signal for group chats and Telegram for channels (news and piracy).

    I trust Signal more.

  • @deur@feddit.nl
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    151 year ago

    Stop “trusting” your messaging platform and use matrix for fucks sake.

  • Yozul
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    101 year ago

    Out of those options obviously Signal.

    In reality I just use SMS because everyone I know is still using that or iMessage so what’s happening at my end is irrelevant to my privacy, and I wouldn’t send anything I wanted to be private from a phone at all. There are no good solutions for that.

    • @bastion@feddit.nl
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      51 year ago

      There used to be: Signal.

      With Signal as your default messaging app, you could just tell people to switch to Signal and use one app. If both parties had Signal, secure messaging was used automatically.

      Friends and family slowly started using Signal, because it’s just a nice messaging app, plus it’s potentially more secure.

      Then Signal decided to tank SMS. …and slowly, friends and family started leaving Signal, and now it’s just us security-conscious folks again.

      • @varsock@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        I echo this.

        For the non-tech savy, having one messaging app (Signal/SMS) was excellent because a user can send a message to a contact and it would automatically use signal if the recipient was also using it and use SMS when the recipient wasn’t.

        Now I get SMSs and have to gently remind the contact (or just reply in signal).

        Or a frantic call from family “hey I can’t message my boss, I have their contact but signal isn’t finding the contact” then having to explain that SMS and signal are different.

    • @varsock@programming.dev
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      1 year ago

      worth mentioning that SMS messages are plaintext as they traverse the carrier network. They are also logged by seemingly any equipment that they traverse. Also when they aren’t delivered immediately, they wait in a queue on the network waiting for the receiving device to “phone home” (pun intended 😎).

      The caveat here is often times the plaintext message is in an encrypted tunnel (physical wireless layer, and data tunnels in carrier EPC) but at tunnel endpoints, SMSs are nakey

  • @MangoPenguin@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    71 year ago

    Signal, but no one I know uses it, no local groups are on it. It doesn’t really have many features.

    Meanwhile telegram has tons of people in local groups for all kinds of stuff.

  • Ark-5
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    61 year ago

    At my time of adoption, Telegram had a better feature set and I wasn’t honestly super focused on the privacy minutia. Knowing what I know now…I guess Signal, but honestly I’d probably go even more niche if I was after something truly private. Like P2P messengers or something like that. I don’t really treat any messaging platform as fully private. If I really need something guaranteed to be private and I don’t want to try to convince a friend to install a new, even more obscure app, I’d probably just encrypt text files and generate keys for each other and send them via something, maybe email idk.

  • Gunpachi
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    61 year ago

    I would trust a Matrix client like Element / Schildichat over Signal and Telegram. But if we are only considering the latter, I would pick signal (like many other comments have mentioned).

    Trust doesn’t matter if no one uses these platforms to message you.

    I persuaded my friends into trying other messaging platforms but they ended up flocking back to Whatsapp because their contacts are not on Signal and definitely not on Matrix. Also normies may find Element/Matrix difficult to use. Almost all of them have Telegram accounts and believes it’s more private than Whatsapp, also apparently they use it as a content downloading app than a messaging app.