readalot
Member
Thanks for this. I will look into this more.Session
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Thanks for this. I will look into this more.Session
I use Signal, but I think its just personal preference.What happened to Signal?
Anything that has a tel # attached is by default not anonymousWhat happened to Signal?
I thought it was getting popular, a while ago.
Then Telegram took over
I use Signal, but I think its just personal preference.
Now that depends what kind of number or if you even use a real tel #Anything that has a tel # attached is by default not anonymous
Its not about hiding it about protecting.I don't have anything particular "interesting" or controversial I need to hide.
Its not about hiding it about protecting.
True.
But for me, in reality, that's just semantics.
You are protecting it by keeping it out of sight.
I am just saying, however mundane it is, that's the way it should be.
But, in practice, I have nothing that would be of interest, so I am unconcerned.
Can you do a YouTube video of that?You could show up at a DEA office, confess to buying the above mentioned kit of tren, and they'd tell you to get out before they have you arrested for trespassing.
You got me there. Guilty LOL.The irony is the most security aware, to an extreme degree, tend to be those who, worst case scenario, are facing virtually nothing of consequence, legally.
Can you do a YouTube video of that?
J/k. Please be careful.
"But I'm guilty officer"You could show up at a DEA office, confess to buying the above mentioned kit of tren, and they'd tell you to get out before they have you arrested for trespassing.
Their latest Terms and Conditions uses a standard of, "illegal [conduct] in most countries." That sweeps steroid activity into the remit.What is their definition of a "criminal?"
Anybody who breaks any law?
Sums up my thoughts as well. Basically, all that I want to add is that I think that TG is still great technology, as in leaps and bounds ahead of Western social media at its core. It's exciting; what they have created. An ecosystem, it really is like Web3.0 from where I sit. Translations on the fly (Pro, Biz); powerful communities. It's the Gold Standard.I wonder if "since 2018" is coincidental to Telegram being blocked in Russia.
They Kremlin wanted backdoor access, so all communication in their country can be accessible to Russian security services.
Durov always denied he gave concessions, which is obviously not true and maybe it was further established when they got banned there a couple of years afterwards.
The Russian regime was using Telegram anyway (e.g. during Covid) and I doubt they would have done so, had the system been as impenetrable and out of their control as advertised.
It was never secure messaging anyway, unless one selected a specific option within its settings.
The French incident just cemented it and made it all public.
Cute how the Russians took a stand against Durov's arrest.
When he got held in France, the media was all a flutter with talk of freedom of speech and censorship.
It's fair enough, as are considerations of private communication being violated.
I do want private communication to be so.
But, practically, I find this ambivalence where anything that goes on online should be blindly allowed because it is private, things that irl would never be accepted in a civil society, just because the system is supposed to be impenetrable, for everyone's sake.
Should there be an unaccountable laissez-fair attitude when it comes to online behaviour, that we are willing to accept?
Should a line be drawn?
Can you establish boundaries with no moderation and scrutiny, of any kind?
It's quite funny how Telegram's owner has chosen the UAE, that bastion of liberalism, human rights and free speech oasis as one of his countries of residence.
Just run away from the Russians and find a more enlightened place to call home.
Oh yes, he also has a French passport. Just in case.
I think the decision has already been made with the launch of TON and their whole integration of Web3.0 tech into the ecosystem. The latest push towards "legitimacy through intl law compliance" is just a way to make it official.This precipice at which they find themselves will define their future. They can choose to go the route of a Banana Republic, or meet the standards of the international consensus. If they do the latter, I believe they're poised for growth rather than failure or even contraction myself.
Damn, you've got some good knowledge on the topic. I hope so.I think the decision has already been made with the launch of TON and their whole integration of Web3.0 tech into the ecosystem. The latest push towards "legitimacy through intl law compliance" is just a way to make it official.