Sometimes I wonder if the motivation is to allow petty fraud as an outlet for crime, to keep the people who commit it from doing other less desirable things. Like a stealth welfare.
If you want security and privacy to become mainstream, simply make it a boring, invisible implementation detail of your messenging platform which is superior in convenience I believe that is precisely Signal's…
but how do you know if it really is the source code of Signal? That's a valid question which used to bug me about open source projects. But apparently they finally figured out that the output of the source needs to be…
"Open source" means the SOURCE CODE is OPEN. Which it is. The internet is full of half-baked "secure" and "private" chat clients and servers. Security is hard to get right. I'm guessing they don't want the reputation of…
Sometimes I wonder if the motivation is to allow petty fraud as an outlet for crime, to keep the people who commit it from doing other less desirable things. Like a stealth welfare.
If you want security and privacy to become mainstream, simply make it a boring, invisible implementation detail of your messenging platform which is superior in convenience I believe that is precisely Signal's…
but how do you know if it really is the source code of Signal? That's a valid question which used to bug me about open source projects. But apparently they finally figured out that the output of the source needs to be…
"Open source" means the SOURCE CODE is OPEN. Which it is. The internet is full of half-baked "secure" and "private" chat clients and servers. Security is hard to get right. I'm guessing they don't want the reputation of…