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antoniovr

@cosvak @signalapp @silence i see now project is probably dead so good luck looking for forks! It is still possible to install (i actually have it installed but not active) but no upgrades since 5 years ago. By the way, this were the official reasons for the split: signal.org/blog/goodbye-encryp where i live sms is nearly extinguided (only used to receive confirmation sms), so the functionality was not really needed. But i remember in Denmark for ex. sms was still quite alive 2 years ago...

4 comments
Cosvak

@antoniovr @signalapp @silence yeah that's unfortunate the silence project looks dead.

I hate this response, just use this way, why aren't you using this instead of sms. Unfortunately a large amount of the US uses sms and I have to deal with a lot of tech illiterate people in my job, so text is still the primary use for messaging one another cause it's only the main universal way of communicating to one another without needing to install a certain app.

antoniovr

@cosvak @signalapp @silence sorry if you misunderstood me. I mean in Spain it is not really needed for we write no sms, only receive a few and almost always not personal mail but from companies. I understand it can be different in other places as I have seen it.

Cosvak

@antoniovr @signalapp @silence all good my Spanish homie, Europeans forget that America is just a third world country with a Gucci belt

The EU and the world at large is waaaaaaay farther ahead on a lot of tech initiatives that benefits their country as a whole and not the business sector.

Sorry if I made you feel like I was directly upset at you, it's not you, just the answer I get a lot, but that's making more sense since I don't notice a lot of Americans on the platform.

Cosvak

@antoniovr @signalapp @silence I found the reasoning post for removing plaintext sms from @signalapp here

signal.org/blog/sms-removal-an

And it looks like it comes down to, not wanting to deal with the insecure nature of sms messaging even though it was clearly labeled in the android app, Google store compliance, and what I read as wanting to make some kind of unity between the iOS version and the android version.

And their solution for ending sms support was, go somewhere else we don't want you

@antoniovr @signalapp @silence I found the reasoning post for removing plaintext sms from @signalapp here

signal.org/blog/sms-removal-an

And it looks like it comes down to, not wanting to deal with the insecure nature of sms messaging even though it was clearly labeled in the android app, Google store compliance, and what I read as wanting to make some kind of unity between the iOS version and the android version.

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