As I understand it, the OTP factor only protects the login. While this is still good practice, it wouldn't help in the event the vaults are stolen.
You just have to give up E2EE if you use telegram and want chats sync'd across your devices.
It's too bad telegram doesn't support e2ee (in a meaningful, useful way) because their client is actually quite nice.
No such luck on Android, you need to use tasker or similar. Really a nuisance but not a deal breaker. It would be dreamy to set up the client to not use specific SSIDs.
True, but the Android launch was seven days after the purchase... Surely its release was already imminent. Regardless, you're right and this is an interesting tidbit!
I'm of the same vein, fully thought this was going to be some data structure.
As I understand it, the OTP factor only protects the login. While this is still good practice, it wouldn't help in the event the vaults are stolen.
You just have to give up E2EE if you use telegram and want chats sync'd across your devices.
It's too bad telegram doesn't support e2ee (in a meaningful, useful way) because their client is actually quite nice.
No such luck on Android, you need to use tasker or similar. Really a nuisance but not a deal breaker. It would be dreamy to set up the client to not use specific SSIDs.
True, but the Android launch was seven days after the purchase... Surely its release was already imminent. Regardless, you're right and this is an interesting tidbit!
I'm of the same vein, fully thought this was going to be some data structure.