• Possibly linux@lemmy.zip
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    4 months ago

    Law enforcement doesn’t request data frequently enough in order to build a social graph. Also they probably don’t need to as Google and Apple likely have your contacts.

    Saying that it is somehow a tool for mass surveillance is frankly wrong. It has its issues but it also balances ease of use. It is the most successful secure messager out there. (WhatsApp doesn’t count)

    Sure it has problems. I personally don’t understand there refusal to be on F-droid. However, phone numbers are great for ease of use and help prevent spam. You need to give your personal information to get a phone number. Signal also has very nice video calls which no other messager can seem to replicate.

    • Preston Maness ☭@lemmygrad.ml
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      4 months ago

      Law enforcement doesn’t request data frequently enough in order to build a social graph. Also they probably don’t need to as Google and Apple likely have your contacts.

      They don’t need to request data. They have first-class access to the data themselves. Snowden informed us of this over a decade ago.

      Saying that it is somehow a tool for mass surveillance is frankly wrong.

      Signal per se is not the mass surveillance tool. Its dependence on Google is the mass surveillance tool.

      However, phone numbers are great for ease of use and help prevent spam.

      And there’s nothing wrong with allowing that ease-of-use flow for users that don’t need anonymity. The problem is disallowing anonymous users.

            • Preston Maness ☭@lemmygrad.ml
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              4 months ago

              If that were the case Molly FOSS wouldn’t exist

              I’m not speaking of hard dependence as in “the app can’t work without it.” I’m speaking to the default behavior of the Signal application:

              1. It connects to Google
              2. It does not make efforts to anonymize traffic
              3. It does makes efforts to prevent anonymous sign-ups

              Molly FOSS choosing different defaults doesn’t change the fact that the “Signal” client app, which accounts for the vast majority of clients within the network, is dependent on Google.

              And in either case – using Google’s Firebase system, or using Signal’s websocket system – the metadata under discussion is still not protected; the NSA doesn’t care if they’re wired into Google’s data centers or Signal’s. They’ll be snooping the connections either way. And in either case, the requirement of a phone number is still present.

              Perhaps I should restate my claim:

              Signal per se is not the mass surveillance tool. Its dependence on Google design choices of (1) not forcing an anonymization overlay, and (2) forcing the use of a phone number, is the mass surveillance tool.