• jadero@programming.dev
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      1 year ago

      I agree, but I cut them some slack based on history. They started off using SMS for transport, encrypting everything in place and encrypting sent messages when the recipient also had Signal (Text Secure at the time, I think).

      When they switched to using internet for encrypted messages, they kept SMS capabilities. I liked that they did that, because it let me use one app to communicate with everyone: encrypted with other Signal users, SMS with those using competing and incompatible products or just stuck on SMS.

      They recently dropped SMS support, so now my contacts are fragmented and I still have to use SMS as a lowest common denominator unless I want to install multiple apps. And since I’m on Android, one of those apps is not possible to install.

      Since dropping SMS, there is no reason to hang on to phone numbers, and they seem to be headed that direction.a

      I understand all the reasoning. I don’t understand why nobody seems to be building nice apps using interoperable protocols and encryption. (Well, I do understand the greed, whether for money, power, or fame, I just don’t like it.)

      • u_tamtam@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        I don’t understand why nobody seems to be building nice apps using interoperable protocols and encryption. (Well, I do understand the greed, whether for money, power, or fame, I just don’t like it.)

        Just join the bunch of us using XMPP then, nothing to miss from Signal.

        • jadero@programming.dev
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          1 year ago

          Oh, I forgot about that! I had better luck getting people on to Signal, so that’s what I settled on. I’ll take a look again.

          Thanks!

          • u_tamtam@programming.dev
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            1 year ago

            Please let us know how that goes! And in case you want the “phone number based” onboarding experience of Signal & al. on XMPP, you can recommend https://quicksy.im (I personally find it a terrible and short slighted idea to irrevocably associate one’s online identity and presence to a phone number, but at least the option is there!)

            • jadero@programming.dev
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              1 year ago

              I will!

              I’ve been the phone number route, so now it time to try the right way. If I can get my son on board, my wife will follow and that’s all who’s left on Signal anyway.

              • u_tamtam@programming.dev
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                1 year ago

                At that scale, you could even consider self-hosting so your data never escapes your “digital home”, and look into https://snikket.org/

                Edit: snikket is a packaged version of XMPP based around prosody on the server

                • jadero@programming.dev
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                  1 year ago

                  Thanks. I’m working on a requirements document to help me figure out exactly what I want to do and how to accomplish that.

                  What I’ve got so far is leading me in the self-hosting direction. Scale is certainly part of it, but it seems likely that the best way for me to get more people on board is to set up a family server. That way it’s not so much about “here’s a new way to communicate” but “here’s a small, private space to plan family reunions and keep everyone up-to-date on family events.”

                  Also, I have some other projects that I’ve been putting off because of the need to figure out self-hosting. Running something for the extended family might be the push I need :)

                  Snikket looks like it checks off a few boxes. It looks pretty simple. It uses Docker (not that I care, exactly, but it seems that Docker is something I will have to come to terms with in general for other things on my self-hosting roadmap). The Android app is available through F-Droid, something that only I care about, but I do care about that.

                  So, finish fixing the snowblower (today, I hope), figure out how to get my OCI server running properly, then work on snikket. Maybe this time next week? 🤞