🚒 iPhone vs Android 🚒
Round 394!
ok but in all seriousness, let’s say I want to send some SMS/RCS using my cell, but I want to do that from the computer… should be feasible?
iPhone’s iMessage: “we love our walled garden so much that NO ONE can send messages using a web interface, despite iMessage being an iCloud enabled app and the ecosystem having iCloud apps available online to any non-Mac – but we decided that iMessage alone should never be usable on the iCloud web interface (because reasons?)”
Android via Messages App: “sure thing fellow Happy Camper! here you go! https://messages.google.com and it’s just as secure as using the device itself.”
Best part… Android’s method WORKS ON FREEBSD!
#noFlameWarNeeded #iPhone #Android #mobileDevices #FreeBSD #Linux #Apple
@shac @winterschon A convenience bonus for Google and perhaps a reason to dislike iOS. How does WhatsApp web manage to maintain e2e encryption, then?
@mmatute_us @shac
Webapps generally rely on TLS for data in transit, but full E2EE requires data at rest encryption as well
Since whatsapp is not a part of the hardware storage at the block level it has no control over anything other than the data it presents to the OS – which may or may not be encrypted separately.
I don’t use whatsapp so I’ve not looked into that side of its implementation, but here’s the NCC audit if that seems appealing to review: https://www.nccgroup.com/media/phzpm0qv/_ncc_group_metaplatforms_e008327_report_2023-11-14_v10.pdf
@[email protected] @[email protected] Thank you for this! I’m starting to understand.