In-reply-to » @deebs Yeah, it's a story as old as time, I remember when I joined KeyBase. It had private messages, place to link and verify your social media and keys, later they also added some weird crypto integration and than it got bought by some Chinese company and the privacy went right out the window. So I don't really trust these new services asking for a phone numbers and offering weird crypto integrations that no one ever asked for. I gave Signal a try and didn't really like it. Telegram was a tiny bit better, but still think it's not even work to keep it installed on my phone.

@thecanine@twtxt.net I’m afraid your arguments are a bit weak there πŸ˜…

  • Signal AFAIK is 100% open source
  • Signal is also been audited, both it’s crypto and protocol
  • The protocol (also called Signal) is also an open protocol and open source
  • The protocol has a wide variety of implementation languages that can be used, including Go, Javascript, C/C++, Python and probably others.

To your statement of:

They also preach open-source and yet parts of the app have been close-sourced already.

Please provide evidence πŸ˜‚ For if true, I may have to reconsider using Signal πŸ˜…

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