I think XMPP.

  • poVoq
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    13 years ago

    You can either make e2ee easy to use and enable it by default, or you can try to make people understand what they are doing to protect them from edge cases. Conversations does the former, while not making the latter impossible.

    Could more emphasis be put on the latter? Maybe, but then people would complain about it being difficult to use and understand.

    That people don’t understand e2ee and assume that it somehow makes your communication magically secure is a social problem and not a technical one. All the above things you mention are not difficult to understand or do in the Conversations GUI, but they require a basic understanding of e2ee, which you can’t teach in a GUI.

    In the end IMHO it is better to have many people using e2ee even in a less secure form, as most people don’t really need strong e2ee anyways. But by having many people use e2ee, it can’t be used to single out the few people that really need higher opsec, but those few really need to understand what they are doing and teach their contacts accordingly.

    • @ancom@lemmy.ml
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      13 years ago

      You can either make e2ee easy to use and enable it by default, or you can try to make people understand what they are doing to protect them from edge cases. Conversations does the former, while not making the latter impossible.

      …the “edge case” that e2ee should protect from third parties such as an admin to read the messages. A new key could create a pop up window that informs the user. If user doesn’t care, there can be an option for “never show again”. Having a function that says “verify key”, should also be expected from an app that argues to have secure e2ee implementation.

      as most people don’t really need strong e2ee anyways.

      Most people don’t need any. It’s infosec larping what people do. And then software developers build software for LARPing.