- cross-posted to:
- privacyguides@lemmy.one
- linuxphones@lemmy.ml
- matrix@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- privacyguides@lemmy.one
- linuxphones@lemmy.ml
- matrix@lemmy.ml
It promises to be the one-in-all chatting app, based on matrix, providing compatibility to other apps (Telegram, Signal, WhatsApp etc.) through bridges.
So what do you think, from a privacy point of view and also user friendliness on the other hand?
I was thinking it was something like what pidgin does on desktop, adapted for mobile, and was highly enthusiastic, but realized it works using matrix bridges and doesn’t process locally…
Well, at least it can be self hosted.
Given this is !privacy and the advertise as front page features both “works will all your messaging apps” and “end to end encryption”, it seems important to flag currently those aren’t mutually compatible.
It’s not their fault the apps don’t have e2e APIs, it’s a tough problem, but the secrecy and privacy guarantee is just “trust us to stick to our policy”. And they’re a start-up, tooling isn’t perfect (or even exist), mistakes happen, etc
Their self-hosting looks interesting, but then it said to use your own clients too, which took the fun out of that.