It isn't private.
Was literally built/sponsored by NSA and CIA to the tune if tens of million USD per year until recently.
And before you argue:
1) the information is public
2) no, I won't spoon feed and you look up yourself
3) CIA doesn't admit they spy on you. Yet is safe to consider they aren't sponsoring that messenger for our benefit and their main reason to exist is intelligence gathering
4) no point offending, nor stating half-truths on behalf of your agency employer.
You do your thing, I do mine.
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Replies (6)
@npub1hfg3...7yfm do you use a private messaging system?
Which one?
This.
And we know you’re not a spook trying to discourage its use how??
isn't Signal open source?
Never said you can't use it.
Just pointed the fact it was developed in tandem with intelligence agencies and financed every single year of existence by them. Just in case the obvious name "signal" isn't obvious enough of inside joke as it is.
Couldn't care less to convince you about my career profile. Just do whatever you want with fantastic piece of .. tech 😆
My favorite are NOSTR private messages.
These messages use an encryption algorithm similar to PGP that is bulletproof, meaning that many tools can replicate the encryption/decryption and was never once demonstrated as broken since about 30 years to now.
The other aspect is that many jazzy apps will say "heavy xyz bullshit and support strong privacy" but then:
1) you are using their "free" compiled binaries as clients on your phone/laptop
2) you are using their "free" servers to store your chats
3) Realistically, nobody really runs their own servers for those "clients"
People forget how easy it is for an adversary to get your IP address and then decide that your "free" client sends plain text data to their "free" servers, or if you are unlucky they even have your private key to comfortably decode texts on their side like Signal/WhatsApp are likely doing.
I'm using NOSTR messages because there are hundreds of volunteer-based relays to choose from (difficult to centralize and track your IP), there are dozens of different clients to send messages (difficult to spoof the encryption). This forces all different parts of the communication chain to stick with the protocol.
There are still flaws on this approach. For example the storage on the devices is very vulnerable (e.g. Android, iOS, OSX and Windows) will be inspecting your files on disk. Communicating to a random volunteer-supported isn't a strong guarantee of privacy.
In a few weeks you'll likely see a messenger from my side that addresses those weak spots.