- cross-posted to:
- privacyguides@lemmy.one
- cross-posted to:
- privacyguides@lemmy.one
Is Telegram really that bad and should i look more into it or is sticking to signal really the best option?
Depends on your use case. Signal is definitely more privacy focused, but telegram has more people using it and is easier for people to use and understand. Telegram is very akin to Discord, in that all the data is stored somewhere you have no control over.
Also telegram is feature rich over signal. Son you have better user base and features in one hand versus e2e encryption by default on the other.
The problem with this question is your friends, if whatever you decide on isn’t something your friends have or are willing to get, then it’s not useful for you. Signal offers probably the best mix of adoption and security. It however misses a few notable features, for example the iOS client has no way to back up or restore your messages. I’m a big fan of matrix, which seems very extensible and has good security, but if you are in a sensitive application like an authoritarian country, it wouldn’t be my choice. All the messages are stored on the server and while they are encrypted it’s still not what I would use for a chat I never want to see in court.
…or you go for Matrix, which has “bridges” allowing to chat with Signal and Telegram users (among others).
Okay, Now I want to ait down and learn hkw to use Matrix. Let me get this straight: It allows me to communicate with people on other apps such as discord and whatsapp? So does that mean I can just replace all my messaging with Matrix bridges?
Yeah, this suddenly became very interesting.
Absolutely.
Do you know any good, FOSS Matrix bridge apps that are kept updated?
Most look out of date on Droidify.
The Matrix bridges run server-side and not on the phone.
Unlike Signal, Telegram is a very realistic alternative to WhatsApp. It has almost a billion users and works really well.
Signal could end up being killed by the Republicans.