hodor137
hodor137 t1_j9xcga4 wrote
Reply to comment by 1wiseguy in Signal CEO: We “1,000% won’t participate” in UK law to weaken encryption by ActivePersona
I didn't say it was secure, or good. My point was that just because "encryption" is used doesn't mean there can't be a back door that prevents a 3rd party from reading your messages.
hodor137 t1_j9x2p2w wrote
Reply to comment by alsu2launda in Signal CEO: We “1,000% won’t participate” in UK law to weaken encryption by ActivePersona
But you DO need to trust what they're doing, unless you take the steps you mentioned.
hodor137 t1_j9x20xo wrote
Reply to comment by duh374 in Signal CEO: We “1,000% won’t participate” in UK law to weaken encryption by ActivePersona
Oh yea, it's absolutely more trustworthy than Whatsapp
hodor137 t1_j9x0ilo wrote
Reply to comment by 1wiseguy in Signal CEO: We “1,000% won’t participate” in UK law to weaken encryption by ActivePersona
Not true at all. Encryption that's not intended and actually implemented to be fully sender-to-receiver can easily be subverted and readable by 3rd parties. In the messaging/signal/Whatsapp context people refer to it as "end to end encryption" but that term doesn't really say anything.
I'm not sure how exactly Signal and these other messaging apps implement their encryption, but they could easily claim end to end encryption while offering governments a "back door" to decrypt and read everyone's messages. Signal is saying they won't do that.
I've never bothered to use Signal but you either have to trust their word, or they have to do a really good job proving to you that only the end users have control of their own private encryption keys. From everything I've heard, including this, they're great and trustworthy - but you still have to trust them.
hodor137 t1_j9xdcqg wrote
Reply to comment by FriendlyDespot in Signal CEO: We “1,000% won’t participate” in UK law to weaken encryption by ActivePersona
Or they could simply have the app upload your keys to their server.
But as others have pointed out, they open source their code so they can't do this without everyone finding out.
My point was really that the comment I was replying to was dumb - just because you have "encryption" doesn't mean no one will ever read your messages. The keys that can decrypt those encrypted messages must also be kept safe.