Privacy-focused messaging app Signal is adding new features for video calls, including links, reactions and a calls tab, in a bid to pose as an
Privacy-focused messaging app Signal is adding new features for video calls, including links, reactions and a calls tab, in a bid to pose as an alternative to Zoom, Google Meet and Microsoft Teams.
Jitsi is a open-source video platform you can self-host.
I don't trust anything going through another company's servers. Zoom had to backpedal when it was found feeding content to AI... Imagine talking about your company business secrets and now some dickwad are Zoom reads the transcripts and steals it.
TBF, the level of privacy afforded at work will never be usable in most companies.
At scale, it's a security nightmare. PII, HIPAA, PCI, If OPSEC can't at the very least go back and see what happened in private channels, it's going to be a hard sell.
Yea I've done work in Privacy focused companies, and they love this stuff, but everyone else who isn't a journalist... Probably not.
You mention HIPPA, and the interesting one with that (to me) is offices don't track conversation already, so it probably wouldnt impact situations like that, but Signal chat most certainly would. Can't report a violation if you can't see it.
No, that was an excuse. They claimed people could mistakenly send unencrypted messages. Easily resolved by changing the color of conversations and send buttons to flag SMS as insecure.
It was really about moving development resources to features like this one. Unfortunately, it makes it much harder to convince people to use (or keep using) Signal, meaning more messages that go by insecure messaging instead.
The U.S. lagged adoption of SMS compared to Europe (relatively high prices for texting in the early days while relatively low prices for calling in the same era) but now SMS/RCS/iMessage are the dominant mobile messaging method in the U.S. There’s much lower adoption of third-party services like WhatsApp compared to the rest of the world because basically everyone has those services (SMS/RCS) already on their phone, they don’t have to sign up for a service that not everyone might use, and it’s basically free on every phone in the U.S. now.
Yes they should. Having business and gaming communities using it also helps the journalists and activists that use it to stay safe by normalizing its use
That's fine and all, but if I use a product (especially a privacy focused one) for my personal communication, I do not want to use it for work. A proper separation between work and personal is too important to me.