

Generally need a reason to do something. Don’t see how signing this moves the needle. Protest and contact congressmen. Internet petitions won’t save you. Collective action irl, strikes, and raising hell might.


Generally need a reason to do something. Don’t see how signing this moves the needle. Protest and contact congressmen. Internet petitions won’t save you. Collective action irl, strikes, and raising hell might.


It also matters if you value organizations changing terms after attracting a community and changing to non-transparent solutions while claiming to be “open”. It matters if your values are different.
But you’re right too. If not logging in, your liability is probably not changing.


I suspect they draw a distinction between using their built binary and logged in services like collaboration from the editor code itself, but iinal.


Agreed and I have domicile in a country that provides improved, though not perfect, protections. But it still tempers my views of the organization.


Nice. This is one of a few promising forks. I think they’re on Codeberg too.


It is quite good and hopefully one of the privacy forks will rise victorious. But yeah, nothing will ever topple neovim and emacs.


I have found a few communities on Matrix that fit that bill to some extent. For some reason they don’t devolve to “general chat” as quickly as most software related Discord servers do, in my experience.


Thank you, really. Have to be cautious these days.


Any source for this video? Could be old.


Capitalization is a display of respect? I always thought it identified proper nouns.
You’re also still capitalizing Ellison and Epstein. Is that out of respect?


This is a really good article and refreshing to see this being recognized as the double edged sword it is (albeit with one edge much sharper than the other). It will be interesting to see how different organizations deal with this. The temporary interaction limitation will be a bandaid in some cases but the deluge will just keep coming.
I’ve been interested in Mitchell Hashimoto’s new trust tooling. I’m not sure it will become a standard, but is a very interesting attempt, and dead simple.


Ha. I still have an open PR on that.
Yes, subpoena was poorly worded. NSL is more likely. But still it is a time-forward threat, which means there is value while the server is or was accepting sealed sender.
And I wasn’t suggesting timing attack is required to defeat sealed sender. I was, on the contrary, pointing out that was a threat even with sealed sender. Though that is non-trivial, especially with CGNAT.
So in summary. You’re right. Sealed sender is not a great solution. But it is a mitigation for the period where those messages are being accepted. A better solution is probably out there. I hope somebody implements it. In the meantime, for somebody who needs that level of metadata privacy, Signal isn’t the solution; maybe cwtch or briar.
Sure. If a state serves a subpoena to gather logs for metadata analysis, sealed sender will prevent associating senders to receivers, making this task very difficult.
On the other hand, what it doesn’t address is if the host itself is compromised where sealed sender can be disabled allowing such analysis (not posthoc though). This is also probably sensitive to strong actors with sufficient resources via a timing attack.
But still, as long as the server is accepting sealed sender messages the mitigation is useful.
Don’t mistake me for saying you’re wrong. I agree with you, mostly. But sealed sender isn’t theater, in my view. It is a best effort attempt to mitigate one potential threat. I think everybody would like that solved but actually solving it isn’t easy as I understand it. Maybe not intractable, but if you have a solution, you can implement it. That is one of the things I like about free software.
In any case, I’m only saying Signal is good for a subset of privacy concerns. Certainly not that it is the best solution in all cases.
It isn’t a meme. It is a fact of modern cryptography in many settings. For example TLS, which is a huge bulk of the traffic, guarantees again privacy not anonymity. I’m not saying one shouldn’t care about metadata privacy. Every communication one engages in requires risk benefit analysis. If your threat modeling shows that for a given message, anonymity is required, then signal, and nearly every single other protocol out there is insufficient.
That doesn’t mean TLS or lib signal, or any other cryptographic tool is not useful, especially in conjunction with other tools.
There are many cases where I want my messages to be private and the cost of entry for the message receiver to be low. Signal is great for that. But I’m not saying no other tools should be considered, just that signal is good at what it does.
You’re the one making insults and I’m smug? Care to actually dispute anything said with reason?
Cool strawmen; I didn’t say any of that. Signal protocol is awesome for privacy, not anonymity. Maybe I don’t have half a brain, but I happen to think the double ratchet implementation is an impressive piece of tech. Maybe I’m as dumb as your fever dream, but compromised exits doesn’t make tor any less of an achievement. Though i2p is also superb. I guess my brain is too weak to understand why those statements are mutually exclusive.
I do each to the extent that I can, but it is a bit more difficult outside the country. And what actions we do each take isn’t always something we want to post about online. At any rate, petitions won’t do it.