Google’s extension of RCS does do e2ee, which raises the question of “what happens to security when you talk to a non-Google user”…
Google’s extension of RCS does do e2ee, which raises the question of “what happens to security when you talk to a non-Google user”…
There’s no need to access the full file system to download to wherever the user wants. In fact the user might not want to use the local file system, but instead a “cloud” storage provider app!
The Storage Access Framework is built precisely for this.
??? Channels are literally public by definition and viewable even without an account. That’s the whole point of channels. They’re more like blogs than messages.
Banning channels is not the same as sharing private data
Why can’t I find any articles about decompiling and researching this one? :(
Sure, I mean, I don’t have any of these though, and I don’t want to deal with even the remote possibility of snail mail arriving From The Internet.
Njalla is bad because you don’t actually own the domain and there have been instances of them shutting down / revoking access?
Haven’t heard of them revoking access for any legitimate users. I like not actually owning the domain because this means not ever seeing a fucking form asking for my literal home address.
The real core difference is that XMPP just passes messages around (and history is just bolted on as an extra thingy between you and your server), while Matrix is literally a federated database of message history.
On Firefox Android, adding to home screen is basically just a shortcut to open a very slightly app-ier tab (no browser toolbar, notification to copy the URL). Otherwise it’s equivalent to normal browsing, so yes, your extensions work as usual. (Just checked myself with Tampermonkey).
No, there’s no additional information about your phone, that doesn’t exist.
https://dontkillmyapp.com/