Anyone here have experience or comments on using the Signal app?
It boasts having end-to-end encryption.
August Abolins wrote to All <=-
Anyone here have experience or comments on using the Signal app?
Anyone here have experience or comments on using the Signal
app?
I have it on my phone, but hardly ever use it, because very
few people I know also have it. And when you do want to
send them a message they also have whatsapp, and you don't
remember they also have signal...
It boasts having end-to-end encryption.
That's why I installed it.
And then there also is 'Wire' messenger, which is supposed
to be also pretty good regarding privacy, but I use it even
less...
I have it on my phone, but hardly ever use it, because very
few people I know also have it. And when you do want to
send them a message they also have whatsapp, and you don't
remember they also have signal...
WhatsApp is owned by FB now, isn't it? If so, I'd drop it.
It also seems that the user environment is so saturated with alternate/similar choices that people either don't care or don't
want to change from what they are current using to connect to
their existing list of contacts.
And then there is the matter of privacy. Nobody seems to care -
unless of course their email accounts get hacked or their private
pics are somehow copied all over the internet.
I have roped in one family friend onto Telegram. We both feel it
is a better platform than FB's messenger that clearly has a
reputation that it monitors content. We have never had a "live"
chat between us (our online schedules are so different) so
Telegram's private/live chat and its exploding message feature
has never been tested. But Signal sounds better.
Does Signal have a desktop app similar to what Telegram offers?
(I wouldn't ask that if I had internet access at this time. But I
have to wait until Jan 4 to get my mobile data back, or I have to
wait until I can connect to the DSL at my shop tomorrow morning
even to send this.)
I like Telegram's offerings across ALL devices, especially the
desktop. The desktop version permits much better editing
performance.
I have had some extended personal exchanges on FB Messenger
*before* I realized that it would probably be good to not
continue and share info that way.
It boasts having end-to-end encryption.
That's why I installed it.
Telegram has the same claim (now) doesn't it?
And then there also is 'Wire' messenger, which is supposed
to be also pretty good regarding privacy, but I use it even
less...
Never heard of Wire. I'm a bit curious. I will have to try and
remember to research that - after Jan 4 ofcourse. :(
WhatsApp is owned by FB now, isn't it? If so, I'd drop it.
Afaik it is. And would be something I would avoid as much
as possible. Except I have no real choic in the matter,
because I'm required to have it on my (company) phone...
I think privacy awareness is getting better. But people
still choose the easy way. Instead of trying to convince
others to use the better option, they just use what's
already available/installed/used by most people.
I have roped in one family friend onto Telegram. We both feel it
is a better platform than FB's messenger..
Me and my 2 brothers use it to communicate amongst
eachother. There are some coworkers that have it available,
but most of the time still use whatsapp to start a
conversation. I try to stear that to Telegram sometimes,
but not with great success... :-/
Does Signal have a desktop app similar to what Telegram
offers?
I had to look it up myself. There are clients for several
platforms: windows, mac, linux (only debian based). For my
distribution the client is in the application repositories,
but not for the older version I'm currently using. So not
as good as Telegram, but almost as good...
(I wouldn't ask that if I had internet access at this time.
But I have to wait until Jan 4 to get my mobile data back..
So you sent this message from the shop?
I like Telegram's offerings across ALL devices, especially
the desktop. The desktop version permits much better
editing performance.
I like it too!
I only have a fake FB account to be able to view links to
FB you sometimes get. I have never used it to communicate
with anyone I know.
Never heard of Wire. I'm a bit curious. I will have to
try and remember to research that - after Jan 4 ofcourse.
:(
On their frontpage they claim: "The most secure
collaboration platform"... And clicking further you can
read:
But they also seem to be a commercial platform now. Didn't
know that, maybe that has changed...?
WhatsApp is owned by FB now, isn't it? If so, I'd drop it.
Afaik it is. And would be something I would avoid as much
as possible. Except I have no real choic in the matter,
because I'm required to have it on my (company) phone...
Ah.. then that's a different story. But why can't your company
[1] influence a move to the less evasive Telegram or Signal for
example? They could broadcast an annoucement that a phase-over to
one of the other apps is encouraged and a full migration is
expected to take by a specif date.. OR.. [2] introduce new policy
to use Telegram/Signal for its new customers/clients?
But the whole thing is probably one of those situations were the
1st-use scenario wins. Therefore, why bother with the tedious
hassle of installing something else and have to reestablish the
contacts from another app - especially for exisiting customers.
I think privacy awareness is getting better. But people
still choose the easy way. Instead of trying to convince
others to use the better option, they just use what's
already available/installed/used by most people.
That reminds me when the various chat programs like ICQ, Jabber,
iChat, Pidgin, AIM, etc.. were all present and different people
chose to use a specific chat program for specific reasons they
had. I encountered the same split of different chat programs with
select contacts. But I think it was Pidgin that helped to
consolidate the other chat accounts into one program. That was
sweet.
It's same install issue with Signal. Since I have to install it
on the phone to even qualify to try it, I need to have the .APK
version. I think I found the legit file as version 5.0.8 here:
https://signal.org/android/apk/
..but the SHA256 that I get doesn't match what they report on
the site:
"You can verify the signing certificate on the APK matches this
SHA256 fingerprint:
29:F3:4E:5F:27:F2:11:B4:24:BC:5B:F9:D6:71:62:C0 EA:FB:A2:DA:35:AF:35:C1:64:16:FC:44:62:76:BA:26
But I guess the SHA256 above is for the "certificate", not the
file itself?
Why can't everyone just stick with MD5 or SHA256 for the "files"
and avoid having us to find other apps to read certificates!
But another problem persists. The $5 top up + 200MB is supposed
to allow me to cruise at 3G speeds. But the best that I am
getting now is 36Kbps!
This shit is way overpriced.
I like Telegram's offerings across ALL devices, especially
the desktop. The desktop version permits much better
editing performance.
I like it too!
It's especially nice to be able to adjust the colours and the
backgrounds. Does Signal have that?
Sysop: | DaiTengu |
---|---|
Location: | Appleton, WI |
Users: | 993 |
Nodes: | 10 (0 / 10) |
Uptime: | 214:41:07 |
Calls: | 12,972 |
Files: | 186,574 |
Messages: | 3,268,542 |