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Posts
3
Comments
143
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • I also find it crazy that people don't understand the value of privacy. Telling people that Nissan wants to sell information about your sexual activity seemed to wake some of my social circle up. But only in the context of Nissan, which almost certainly doesn't have that data. Meta almost certainly does.

    What sort of roadmap are you looking for in Signal? It does everything I need it to do, personally.

  • Is it? How do you define enshittification?

    Because adding paid promotions to something that never had them is always the beginning "making things worse" -ificaton.

    The rest of this story is very predictable following Meta's track record with social media. Everything will go to shit from a UX perspective now that they've decided to put ads in the app. That is how this works.

  • I fully support the push for open protocols. It's insane to me that most walled garden messaging apps are largely a wrapper for XMPP.

    Signal supporting SMS would be nice, but I certainly prefer web based protocols over MMS for sending media. The less compression there is on the photos and videos I share the better.

    Other than being forced to use WharsApp due to their market dominance, I have no desire to use anything proprietary or closed source.

    Signal is my top choice open source option, because it's easy for my family and friends to just use, and it's one of a very small pool of messaging apps that is verifiably private and secure.

  • If you log into the app, you'll see promoted content from celebrities and organizations. What do you think drives those promotions?

    It's either direct paid promotion, user data being sold to ad firms, or a combination.

  • Signal is great!

    I remember when it was trash in like 2013, but it's been something I recommend to family and friends since at least 2020. UI is clean, modern, and uncluttered IMO.

    Not sure I've ever seen Signal push anything crypto related.

    Telegram is "pinky promise" secure with a closed source encryption mechanism. I love that it was created by the guy who created VK and fled Russia when the oligarchy wanted control, but that was years ago. Signal is fully open source, including its encryption.

    They store no information on users, not even metadata like phone numbers, and this is documented in the blog posts they make when governments get mad about it after their requests for user data can't be filled.

    The fact that you need a phone number to sign up bothered me early on, but over time I've realized how helpful it is from a UX perspective. Friends and family want to be able to connect to their contacts directly – not ask for a username.