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WhatsApp loses millions of users after terms update (theguardian.com)
733 points by pseudolus on Jan 25, 2021 | hide | past | favorite | 401 comments



WhatsApp worldwide usage is estimated to be more than 2B+ users. Even if this article is accurate, it doesn’t really mean much. In the HN bubble lots of people have migrated to Signal with all of their contacts but outside of that bubble nothing much seems to be happening. Note that I’m not agreeing with these changes, I’m just observing reality.

To put things into perspective, let’s assume that 25M users (as stated in the article) actually moved to Telegram - which I use and like by the way. Let’s assume they fully moved and stopped using WhatsApp (very unlikely). That means less than 1.25% users moved to another platform - and this means assuming many things that aren’t probably real.

It reminds me a bit of the articles about DuckDuckGo vs Google where many people think big changes in usage are happening while ignoring that the average Joe will keep using whatever it’s using unless there’s way too much trouble to continue using it.


The problem is that what makes Whatsapp sticky is the network effect. People use Whatsapp because everyone has Whatsapp.

But if you now have several millions of people who will not use Whatsapp at all, all the groups that they are in will need to migrate to the alternative (which is pretty much Signal/Telegram at this point). So those few million become few tens of millions. And once they migrate and start liking it, they may avoid Whatsapp as well, because it's far easier to just use one app, and then their groups need to migrate, and so on.

Edit 1: Added Telegram as an alternative.


This is exactly right. Author Nassim Taleb has written on this extensively. He calls it "The Dominance of the Stubborn Minority".

A dedicated and stubborn minority can gradually impose their preferences on a majority who does not have a strong opinion on something. This why you'll order a cheese pizza if you're hanging out with friends and a single person in the group is a vegetarian.

In my own life there are many group chats that are now on signal because one stubborn 'ole grouch, namely me, insisted on it. Most people don't give too much thought to the chat app they use, so they kind of shrugged their shoulders and went along with it.


for Nassim's example to work the minority has to be exclusionary. Everything is nut-free because you don't want to kill allergic people and you can't have both nuts and no nuts in your food, so the minority in the group can force to change the behaviour of the rest.

With messaging apps you can use both Whatsapp and Signal, so even if you convince a few people to convert, Whatsapp is unlikely to decline.

The important word in Taleb's thesis is 'stubborn', not minority. The change isn't gradual but 'fractal' with one person in the group being able to flip everyone else, and they going on an doing the same thing.


> With messaging apps you can use both Whatsapp and Signal

You can have both Whatsapp and Signal installed, but everyone in a conversation needs to have the same app. So why not both doesn't apply as neatly as you assert.


Sure, but that assumes you only have one group. I'm in only 2 really small groups, both on Signal, but I keep Whatsapp because there are a few people I can only talk to there.

It's also a backup mechanism in case Signal fails (like it did when the exodus happened)


> It's also a backup mechanism in case Signal fails (like it did when the exodus happened)

I view SMS as a fallback solution. It has plenty of benefits, i.e. no app required, works on every mobile phone ever made.


That's true, but the people I talk to on Whatsapp are not (usually) in the same country as me, and cross-border SMS tends to not be included in a basic package. Especially now that UK has left the EU, that's definitely not going to be cheap. Add to this that cost increases with message length in SMS - over the internet it's basically flat if you have wifi or data (up to a point at least... :D )


You can have both of them installed at the same time, so anyone refusing to join a Signal conversation is just going out of their way to be a pain to deal with.


Eh, I already have enough messaging apps myself (4 right now), so adding more at this point is a hurdle I'd like to avoid. I can imagine others having similar feelings.


On the surface it seems like people would just use two apps, but most people don’t care. So, if nobody is extremely pro WhatsApp because for example they have a non smartphone and it’s what works then WhatsApp dies.

It’s just a question of how many people are extremely pro WhatsApp and will Facebook drive them away.


But you're stuck in a world where apps are segregated that way. But if I were Google, I'd change android to make their messaging app backend-agnostic and able to send information to any app with a unified frontend. I'd ban from the store if not.

Done, nobody cares anymore, for real and features will come from Google :D We're so stuck on using 2 apps instead of 2 networks we forget mobile phone providers had to agree together to do SMS decades ago, and it went fine with dumbed down feature.

And let's be honest, the only killer feature that made me finally adopt whatsapp like 6 years ago was that it used the data plan that works on WIFI rather than the phone plan. We were all fine with SMSes before.


It's weird to hear you say that, because SMS is terrible. Unreliable delivery, delivery receipts that come back even if the recipient's phone is turned off, no media (MMS is also terrible, just try to send a video over it and watch the pixelated garbage that comes out the other side), no privacy or security to speak of, carrier interop issues (character encodings, message length, shortcode support), identity tied to your phone number, no ability to send/receive messages without being tethered to the phone (to be fair, Signal and WhatsApp also have this problem)... I could go on.


Interesting. I guess the issues you see as a user depend on where you life / which carrier you are using?

I had more issues with iMessage delivery then I ever had with SMS in my whole life. I dont even remember a single incident with SMS delivery. And I consider your "missing media" point an advantage. Sending stupid videos from phone to phone is a disease that I dont want to deal with.


> no ability to send/receive messages without being tethered to the phone (to be fair, Signal and WhatsApp also have this problem)

Signal actually has a desktop app. It requires having installed signal on a phone before, and linking the accounts, but it doesn't depend on the phone after that I believe.

As for SMS, it works on pretty much any device and network, with the caveats that it's the first and lowest common denominator messaging service.


  >Signal actually has a desktop app.
So does Telegram. And it works independently of whether or not you've got the app installed on your phone.


SMS and MMS are telco standards whose progress and maintenance depends on the willingness of operators to patch and upgrade their infrastructure equipment (good luck with that)

So yeah, while saddening I don’t expect SMS to make much progress as its lifecycle is tied to the worst one in the industry.

XMPP had a better chance, but unfortunately chatting service is the bait for other purposes... so an interop standard has no chance to survive without regulation.


Back in the day when Google had "don't be evil" as their motto, they released something called GTalk. It was a desktop instant messaging app, because that was before the smartphone era.

They based it on the decentralized protocol Jabber (or XMPP) and even open their servers to others. Meaning you could discuss with people using other servers than GTalk, just like email.

Google closed their servers to federalization, rebranded GTalk to Hangout and made bad decision after bad decision (but always in the direction of closing up instead of supporting open standards), lost the fight for messaging despite controlling the dominant mobile OS.

tl;dr I have no faith in Google to (1) do the right thing for open standards and (2) manage to get any sort of market share on messaging


>Google closed their servers to federalization, rebranded GTalk to Hangout

rewording your sentence: Google stop volunteering time & resources on efforts that help others make money, and focused on only Google making money. I don't own any Google (AlphaBet) stocks, but if I was a shareholder, and someone would have told me that "we have a line item that is -50m on our statement, but hey, it is good for the competitors", I would like that line item gone.

I have faith in Google that they will try their best to make money. They may lose 1 here and make 50 there, but that -1 will be gone after a certain time. And this is a good business decision. Otherwise they would have one cash cow and 100 losers and they would be a break-even business, which is not a Business because Business = profit.


I get it, capitalism is fucking us up. The open standards we take for granted today were created by hippies researchers in the 20th century. That's not happening in today's world.


That's how messaging worked on Maemo/MeeGo on the Nokia N900 and N9.

You just added a bunch of accounts and all you messages and conversations (SMS, Skype, Jabber, etc.) were in one unified place.

Its still effectively this way on modern SailfishOS but as new IM services are effectively app based silos with no public API this system needs, you are not really able to make use of it.


Stubborn minority in this case would be the stubborn Signal users refusing to use Whatapp?

3 groups:

1. Uses Signal only

2. Uses both

3. Uses Whatsapp only

1 is the stubborn minority, 2 is slowly increasing, and 3 probably doesn't care enough to be considered stubborn, and definitely not minority.

At least that was my thought, this whole debacle reminded me immediately of the stubborn minority, so I'm very curious to see how it plays out.


I'd pick a different classification. It's more like these groups:

1. Uses whatsapp out of momentum. Doesn't want to use anything else, but might if people really push them; i.e. open to transition to group 2.

2. Will use whatever. Some people in this group want to stop using whatsapp, but won't break contacts to do so. Some people in this group would prefer to stick with whatsapp to avoid the burden of a switch, but won't break contacts to do so. This is the vast majority of switchers.

3. Die hard whatsapp users. Simply refuse to switch to another app, because it's a hassle, and/or because they begrudge other people making a mountain out of a molehill and asking them to do anything. Might oppose yet-another-app; or might actually want to stick to whatsapp because they actually like the simplicity of the network effect.

4. Die hard non-whatsapp (likely signal?) users. Refuse to use whatsapp, likely due to privacy concerns or distrust of facebook.

I don't think most people trying to switch away from whatsapp are in 4. Anecdotally, I people I know asking to switch are clearly in 2, and are largely losing to those in 3. Only 1 person I know claims to be in 4, but I'm not really sure that'll stick if the exodus doesn't keep momentum. Because of the existance of the bulk of humanity which barely cares about this, and some of which will get annoyed at the suggestion - I suspect group 3 is much, much larger than 4, and that suggests this exodus will fall flat. The only real chance here is that since this is all about closed groups that network effects aren't so huge, so a considerable exodus without actual terminal velocity is possible.


Interesting, I think your classification adds some nice colour to the situation.

To me the biggest question, does 2 grow bigger than 3? When X% of people have Telegram, Whatsapp and Signal installed, then it becomes a non-issue to have Signal only sticklers.

> The only real chance here is that since this is all about closed groups that network effects aren't so huge, so a considerable exodus without actual terminal velocity is possible.

This is my experience so far. I think you're right that the network effect is very fragmented and micro. In my case the few active groups that I value have migrated, the rest don't care and could email me or sms me and I've seen sufficient migration to Signal, signalling that moving from 1 to 4 might be viable.


Yeah, I experienced this myself when - some years ago - I attempted to transition to Signal. In all the groups I was in, there was at least one person from group 3, who outright refused to move. It scuppered my efforts...


I think you both can be correct

I think the stubborn minority may indeed be small, but you havent given the intolerant minority the time ineeds to grow.


I'm in the delicate position where 6 yearsago I started using Telegram and told a friend and now he doesn't want to move because I "should have told him to use signal and I have moved all my friends to Telegram and they wouldn't understand and Signal desktop has memory leaks and I don't like it anyway".

The guy nagging people with Linux ten years ago.

Anyway.


Totally agree. I had a couple groups which were moved from WhatsApp to Telegram and they work great. So I’m aware (and happy) this happens but also I’m that kind of special early-adopter user who cares about things that non-tech users don’t.

This is something I want to highlight. I know we’re not all product managers but as people working in tech we should be able to take different perspectives and understand that what matters to us doesn’t matter at all for the 99% of the people outside our tech world.


This is correct, there is a magic percentage number on what the tipping point for such migration/adoption numbers is - its I believe pretty low, like 7% or so if I remember right.


I wonder if the move will be that straightforward. A group of like-minded, privacy-aware people might move away from WhatsApp when one user advocates for it, but I am not sure a couple of people leaving a large group of average users would be enough to cause the rest to migrate.

Also, human have limited amount of attention --- if Telegram/Signal cannot make it to the critical mass soon then average users who had been convinced to try the alternatives might eventually revert back to WhatsApp because maintaining multiple chatting channels can be quite annoying at times, especially considering majority of their contacts might still be on WhatsApp and it is just easier to post there.


I agree. I've been using Telegram for quite a few years, and back then I used to be more of an early adopter and tried to make my social circles to switch to Telegram and one circle did, the tech circle. The other circles didn't care much about the features that Telegram had as much as the contacts they had on Whatsapp.

So now with that amount of people switching trying out Telegram, could mean that at least 2-3 people on a non-tech social circle might be using Telegram which might end up convincing the whole group to switch because of features (polls? utility bots?) or any other benefit they might find.


Yeah the network effect of WhatsApp is much stronger to me than, for instance, Facebook. A substantial amount of my “conversations” with friends and work-related are WhatsApp. I’d say to the degree that nowadays (in singapore) I’ve recently noticed new contacts (eg someone I buy something from on an online market) will say, “what’s your number where I can WhatsApp you?” Used to be “where do I [call, sms] you?”

I have no issue using telegram or signal, it’s just that the default choice is becoming/became whatsapp.

Cant stand Zuckerberg, but he does have an eye for products that can really explode in growth.


He bought WhatsApp when it was already successful. He had deep pockets and regulators didn't do their job, the merger shouldn't have been allowed.


Afaik Whatsapp had already exploded before it was acquired, at least in Europe.


Exactly. At the time of the acquisition it was already the "default" messaging service in many countries.

The fact that the acquisition happened has more to do with regulators being asleep than Zuckerberg being awake.

As far as I can recall, the EU regulators believed Facebook's lies about not being able to link WhatsApp and Facebook accounts, which Facebook promptly ignored a few years later. They were fined €110m ($134m) [0]. The maximum fine would have been $276m at the time. Still cheap IMO.

This quote reads like a joke now:

> Today’s decision sends a clear signal to companies that they must comply with all aspects of EU merger rules, including the obligation to provide correct information

[0]: https://www.theguardian.com/business/2017/may/18/facebook-fi...


I agree with this. It's exactly what happened to Skype.


When I traveled around Africa, WhatsApp was the only way to contact most people.

I don't envision a whole continent to change to something else unless WhatsApp dies.


Africa used to swear on blackberry messenger. Infact what killed BBM is android and whatsapp


I use it because my mum, who has Parkinsons, can work her Facebook Portal.


The network effect only acts if enough people in your network use it. It is subject to a threshold with a sigmoid activation. If only three people in a group of ten want to use Signal, it's different than if 7 want to switch. So right now, as most folks use Whatsapp, it favours Whatsapp far more than it favours Signal.

It also depends on your level of seniority in that group. If you are a junior member, they likely won't switch, but if you have the social clout, you might be able to get them to switch.

For the same reason, Facebook was initially open to only Harvard, then to a few other ivies, until it opened to all colleges in the USA and Canada. If your high school friend who made it to the the highly esteemed college uses the service you are more likely to switch than if it were the reverse situation. Later these people get into important positions of society and if you want to network with them, you too can use FB.


>let’s assume that 25M users (as stated in the article) actually moved to Telegram

Oh the irony of a knee jerk reaction fleeing an end-to-end encrypted messaging service to a messaging service that only offers opt-in encryption that more often than not doesn't get used. There was never any proposal to remove encryption anywhere, only add a new feature that, by the very nature of it, didn't lend itself to practical end-to-end encryption.


People choose their messaging apps for reasons other than privacy. And there's nothing wrong with that.


There's nothing wrong with it if, and only if, people understand that's the choice they're making.

Here we have an exodus driven by *privacy* concerns surrounding the new policy. Users fled from WhatsApp to other services with the intent of keeping their conversations more private. The subset of those who switched to Telegram made their conversations strictly *less* private, achieving the opposite of their goals.

There is something wrong with that.


> Users fled from WhatsApp to other services with the intent of keeping their conversations more private.

That's not strictly true. Users fled whatsapp to keep their messages away from Facebook. It could be a concern for privacy or a concern for not letting Facebook (specifically) monetize their conversations.


I wouldn't conflate privacy with encryption necessarily.


^^ This.

There's "I'm plotting criminal activities or planning to overthrow my government" messaging which requires secure encryption.

And there's "I don't particularly want to be followed round the intarwebs by adverts for piles ointment, because I mentioned my itchy arse in a message to someone" which requires respect for your privacy.

I reckon most of us are happy enough with the latter in daily use. And, when we do need to plot an overthrow of the government, we can always flick the big "secret chat" switch. I think Telegram just about gets the balance right; sacrificing some default secrecy for ease of use, seamless sync across all your devices and 'fun' things which are likely to lead to wider adoption --whilst also allowing you to switch on the more secure stuff, as and when you need it.


People who leave a service when the terms change in a way that negatively impacts their privacy are clearly choosing based on privacy reasons though (mostly anyway, some might be leaving because their friends left).


Except that the terms of service didn't change in a way that negatively impacted their privacy - they were taken in by misinformation that was left to spread unchallenged because the mainstream media had an axe to grind against Facebook. The net impact of which is that their conversations are now less private and they don't even realise it.


Beware of the malicious PR campaign carried out by Facebook. The terms did change in a negative way, it’s enough to read them to see it. Even for EU users. Later, when Facebook realized this time things would not be ignored, they started their PR campaign. First the claimed that in EU there would be no changes, then (first time I see it in the linked article) they claimed that there were no changes anywhere in the world. At the end of the day what matters is what is in the terms, not what the spokesperson claims. And in the terms there is no opt-out from sharing data with Facebook.


The terms did not change in a malicous way, because they were already malicious. There never was an opt-out of sharing data with Facebook:

> Specifically, users had 30 days after first seeing the 2016 privacy policy notice to opt out of “shar[ing] my WhatsApp account information with Facebook to improve my Facebook ads and product experiences.” The emphasis is ours; it meant that WhatsApp users were able to opt out of seeing visible changes to Facebook ads or Facebook friend recommendations, but could not opt out of the data collection and sharing itself.

Source: https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2021/01/its-business-usual-wha...


I get some trust from the fact that Telegram is the chosen platform for drug dealers and terrorists around the world. The metadata in Signal actually got people in trouble...

Whatever flaws Telegram got, it seems less impactful than getting mined by facebook and the practical design failings of Signal.


Why are telegram’s owners assigned to be better than Facebook?

I can see some benefit with Signal being open source.


Telegram's clients are also FOSS. Anyway, I am not advocating for Telegram. Just stating my trust feelz with Signal and Telegram. I wouldn't use either for anything where my mere association would be a risk.


Care to provide a source for your claims about Signal?


https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/apr/20/matt-shea-righ...

I think this may have been resolved now. However the issue remains that you cannot delete signal contacts and legacy groups, which means anyone who gets a hold on your phone number (without a pin) or phone, or account access to third party involved, got evidence for communication between you and a possible incriminating entity.

> Contacts must be blocked in order to be removed from your Signal Contact List. To learn how to block someone, click here.

https://support.signal.org/hc/en-us/articles/360007319011-Ma...

You either have the contact in your contact list, or block list... I hope that's obviously supporting my claim.

Some of these meta data leaks may have been changed and are a result of my old account, however Signal lost my trust. (And lost sympathy over Moxy Marlinspike's opinions and presentation over time, e.g. the hangover/drunk "centralization: good" CCC talk, the F-droid drama, ...)


> I’m just observing reality.

Well me too and... Even before this recent WhatsApp fiasco I noticed that some parents are using Telegram at the school where my kid goes. Out of 24 kids in my kid's class, there are 3 families which I know for sure have Telegram (I don't have contact with all of the parents so I don't know).

And I think Telegram is reporting more than, what, 500M users by now? If it's true, it's definitely a sizeable dent in WhatsApp's market share. It may not be 2B+, but 500M is quite something.

The thing is: users are not loyal at all. Telegram or Signal or others are a click or two away: it's neither hard to find/install nor to use.

I really wouldn't be surprised to see a bigger shift some day once more people begin to realize that "WhatsApp = FB" (many don't like FB but have no idea WhatsApp belongs to FB).


> The thing is: users are not loyal at all. Telegram or Signal or others are a click or two away: it's neither hard to find/install nor to use.

Users aren't loyal, true, and installing another app is easy, but getting your friends and family to switch often is not.


the ToS hubbub going through mainstream media has made it much easier to get people to switch though.

In my case, I was one of those people really not wanting to use WhatsApp but being forced by group pressure.

But now that I can even just vaguely reference the ToS issue with WhatsApp, I find people are willing to at least try and install Signal.


There's quite likely a lot of overlap. For example I'm using all of them (Signal, Telegram, whatsApp, iMessage and whatnot).


> many don't like FB but have no idea WhatsApp belongs to FB

When you start WhatsApp the splash screen says "WhatsApp from Facebook" so I would be surprised if people really didn't know that the two companies were related. Instagram is the same, it says "Instagram from Facebook".

WhatsApp: https://i.imgur.com/JS20lGJ.png

Instagram: https://i.imgur.com/1SWybdu.png


> In the HN bubble lots of people have migrated to Signal with all of their contacts but outside of that bubble nothing much seems to be happening.

I live in Mexico, most things happen through WhatsApp.

I was surprised by how many of my non-technical friends migrated to Signal and Telegram. Non-techies were sharing fake information about the new policy. The word around was that the new policy would allow facebook to spy on all your messages and photos. This scared off a lot of people and many of my friends at least download Signal or Telegram.


I shared the same opinion, before I saw all of my acquaintances (which are as removed from the HN bubble as you can find) install Signal en masse in a matter of two weeks.

It's purely anecdotal of course, but I never expected this type of reaction to happen so massively and so fast.


I think there was a lot of miscommunication/misinformation shared around. Honestly, even now I'm not entirely sure what the whole thing entails. It's a change of policy that was already in effect, but you have to accept it now? What exactly is now being shared? Being in Europe, there was a lot of talk about how it didn't apply, and yet we still have the message?

I'd not be surprised if a lot of people got "FB (evil!) wants to read everything or they will close your account". Given how often I have received "share this message 10 times or WhatsApp will delete your account" from relatives, I think it also plays into this fear of losing access to your contacts. And it was all over the mainstream news, with the alternatives readily available (and their own shortcomings often not described).


It's funny to me how misinformation can be used to combat (further) misinformation. Food for thought.


Dito. I watched and counted how many are moving to Telegram and Signal and Signal is winning so far. Those aren't HN people.

But I take the bet they are moving to Telegram in a month or two when Signal's shortcomings hit them (mainly chat history and some sync issues).


Agree. This has been the interesting thing to me: that so many non-nerd friends have popped up on Signal. Totally fascinating that the shift is happening to a group who are typically not that bothered about the presence of FB. I'll have to ask them about their motivations in more detail...


Yes, I’ve seen this over here in The Netherlands as well. Just about every day I log in and can see another non-tech acquaintance having joined signal. It’s been at least 50 over the past few weeks, it’s really weird.


This was my experience as well. The signups extend far beyond the tech bubble in the circles I’ve seen adopting signal.


Maybe it was Elon's Tweet that also persuaded people to switch. His other tweet got the SEC after him for market manipulation.


The extremely positive side of this is that you can be a 'competitor' to Google, or other megaservices and steal enough customers to run a 10M+ user company and they woudln't even register you as a competitor. The internet market is HUGE.


Perception matters. You can't get to two billion without getting to 25 million first.


We could also say 1M and still be a valid statement. I don’t know if that tells anything though.

Perception does matter a lot, and that’s why I used the 1% figure. It means one percent of WhatsApp users are investigating a competitor (not even deleting their account in WhatsApp, but I guess few did) and here people seem to see it as a clear tipping point to which I disagree - raw numbers don’t mean much if you have nothing to compare with.


You would be surprised.. I have had two family groups switch to Signal, I never once mentioned switching over because I thought no one would agree. The switch was suggested by people not technologically savvy.


This is so funny. That is what happened to me. I’ve been on Signal for a while and suddenly the whole extended family switched over. The switch to signal is real.


It's actually possible the real drop in users (or usage) might be more. Facebook took the front page (the whole effing page) of every news paper in India last week to alleviate fears. It's only comparable to DDG articles if Google also similarly had to put ads about how Google respects privacy because of an Exodus.


Sri Lankan here (that island under India). You would assume that this would go right over our heads, but a lot of people here are concerned and when I finally installed Signal, I noticed many people already there. Some of them, I never expected to see outside of WhatsApp or Viber.


That sounds pretty desperate. Is there a precedent for companies communicating like this in India?


Facebook was already pushing out long video ads on Indian TV, even before this fiasco. Indian consumers are seemingly more valuable; there are a significant number of users who use WhatsApp for business (customer support & sales). WhatsApp has also started a mobile payments platform in the country.


They (Facebook) have done this before too. I recall that they bought full-page ads in all major newspapers to promote their "Free Basics" initiative.

There are also other examples, but I consider this level of advertising by them to be very desperate.


> loses millions of users

Did millions of users uninstall WhatsApp? I don't think so. The most downloaded app figures by App Annie shows exactly what it says, which app was downloaded the most during that period. So as long as WhatsApp stays in the phone and if it receives a single message from hundreds of contacts a user has; WhatsApp didn't loose that user.

So the correct title IMO is 'Signal, Telegram gained millions of users'.


Did Skype lose millions of users only when those users uninstalled Skype on their desktop, or long before that when those users started installing WhatsApp on their phone?

Most people probably can't remember the exact moment that Skype was no longer relevant.


Fair point, but I don't think Skype & 'mobile first' new generation chat apps like WhatsApp, Messenger, Telegram, Signal etc. belong to the same category.

> Most people probably can't remember the exact moment that Skype was no longer relevant.

When smartphones became the go-to compute device for many. Yes Skype was made available to smartphones too, but like many other 'mobile first' applications which replaced traditional desktop software Skype was pushed down by the chat apps.


Yes, you're right that desktop and 'mobile first' apps are a different category, so that at first, it would seem like the comparison between Skype and WhatsApp is a category error.

But I suppose it's also fair to say that Signal is now a good example of a 'privacy first' app, a new category that WhatsApp equally don't seem too interested in.

I think the analogy still holds both ways: exact uninstalls are not important once the communication starts moving elsewhere, and 'mobile first' and 'privacy first' are categories that companies ignore at the cost of losing millions of users.


Legit question: What are the alternatives to Skype?

Although it's become much less relevant for IM purposes, it's still my to-go application for ad-hoc video calls with friends and family. Mostly because (a) it has an actively maintained desktop client, (b) it is offered as a standalone service, (c) it is home-user friendly (won't splash you with meeting and calendar buttons like zoom).


Signal now has video calling through their desktop application.

(a) its actively maintained (b) unsure about requirements of "standalone service", but its stand alone as its only a chat service (c) its just a messaging client, no calendar/meeting kind of stuff

Other than that I've had good success with web-focused services like Google Meet and Jit.si. There isn't a desktop app but to an extent that's been a win. All you need to do is email/text a link to your chosen friends and its all in their browser using web standards (or semi-standards, no plugins at least for modern FF/Chrome/Edge). No accounts, assuming they have a modern browser there's no software to install, just click and go.


Thanks for the pointer to the Signal desktop app! It looks pretty close to what I had in mind.

As for the definition of a standalone service: One that doesn't tightly integrate with other offerings/ecosystems. Skype is kind of ok because other than connecting with your MS account, it doesn't promote other offerings. Also Microsoft's business model is not based on collecting and selling your data, at least not in the same extent as Google/FB.

Web-focused services work ok if you're comfortable with the web. But for parents, grandparents etc., I feel that a standalone client with a simple interface is more foolproof.


FaceTime, Facebook messenger/instagram video calling, Google hangouts or whatever their new chat and video app is called, and since 2020 Zoom as well got a lot of home user adoption.


> Most people probably can't remember the exact moment that Skype was no longer relevant.

What do you mean? Skype is being used more now than this time last year. It has just been renamed. The first few versions of Teams would even call themselves "Skype" when connecting to PulseAudio.


Teams is an evolution of SkypeForBusiness, which isn't exactly Skype -- consumer Skype still exists. (Teams for Families sounds like it would be the Skype replacement, but it's derived from standard Teams)


Skype for Business... -> Lync ... -> Office Communicator

Say what you want about Microsoft, but they are the (Forefront?) experts at re-re-re-branding.

-- Sent from my MS Passport.NET account.


> So as long as WhatsApp stays in the phone and if it receives a single message from hundreds of contacts a user has; WhatsApp didn't loose that user.

Agree - WhatsApp didn't lose the user. whatsApp lost the usage. That's still a loss. Not a total loss but a loss never the less


> Not a total loss but a loss never the less

This is the first time I have seen about dozen new Signal contacts; but the question is how many of those dozen contacts are initiating messages through Signal and receiving messages in Signal from the newly signed-up users?

I have sandboxed WhatsApp in a separate machine and receive its messages through email[1] and I still receive WhatsApp messages from the aforementioned contacts.

Things would have changed if WhatsApp locked out the profiles(incl. me) who didn't accept the T&C on Feb 8; but now with that gone I don't think there's really going to be any change.

[1]https://abishekmuthian.com/send-and-receive-whatsapp-message...


Maybe they don't totally lose the user but if their usage decrease, that user loses value to them.

I didn't totally delete my Facebook account either, but as I haven't posted in years and don't have the apps installed, I don't think I contribute much more to their bottom line than someone without account.


You are looking at it merely from a percentage point of view. 1.24% at Facebook's scale is _massive_. It is not a drop in the bucket, and Facebook is especially worried because it could be a trend. Today it's 1.24% but how many people would switch tommorow?


Might be a bit more than you think. I’ve been using signal for some work chats, as it is a fully functional app no one I knew was using, so it made for a nice silo.

Since the term change, I’d say maybe 10-20% of the contacts on my phone have installed signal. It notifies you of new contacts. I don’t know if they’re chatting, and no one has actually used it to message me, but the group I’m seeing is far beyond some technical niche.

Whether it dents whatsapp is another question.


Every big snowball starts as a single snowflake. A few million users does _mean much_ if you give it enough time to develop.


I suspect these effects might also be very regional.

Some anecdotal evidence from my end is that with the change of terms nontechnical friends are much more open to use other messengers if I say I don't want to use WhatsApp. Previously I was sort of regarded as the guys who was making a fuzz out of nothing, now people just say OK let's try. I suspect this is because it made it to mainstream media, so there is more general awareness.

It seems also that the people moving now are more the nontechnical audience. For example my partner who is completely nontechnical and using what others are using, just told me last week that suddenly all her acquaintances are popping up on signal.


> In the HN bubble lots of people have migrated to Signal with all of their contacts but outside of that bubble nothing much seems to be happening.

HN can't represent all of the 50 million new users to Signal.


> It reminds me a bit of the articles about DuckDuckGo vs Google where many people think big changes in usage are happening while ignoring that the average Joe will keep using whatever it’s using unless there’s way too much trouble to continue using it.

I don't think that this is an apt comparison. The functionality of IM is virtually unchanged for the past 20 years or so, and can easily be replicated. This makes jumping between different IM much more frictionless than switching a search engine.


“Even if this article is accurate, it doesn’t really mean much” millions of users (to start) moving away from a platform does matter; it matters for those users and could evolve into a larger movement in time.

“Let’s assume they fully moved and stopped using WhatsApp (very unlikely)” why is this “very unlikely”, I’ve uninstalled WhatsApp, I will never install WhatsApp again, ever. I guess I’m part of the “very unlikely” group.


While in general I agree this is small, you could add “so far” to the end of the title and it changes the tone somewhat. These not-inconsiderable losses are continuing, and the question is whether it will get to a tipping point where network effects kick in or not. Every large change had to start somewhere. But I think we’re in agreement that we need to see more evidence to say with any certainty that the tipping point is going to be reached.


A message I received from telegram on Jan 12 2021 says it has more than 500 million active users. “Telegram surpassed 500 million active users. In the past 72 hours alone, more than 25 million new users from around the world joined Telegram. Thank you! These milestones were made possible by users like you who invite their friends to Telegram. ”


There is not much of a network effect on search engines. Nothing is stopping you from using DuckDuckGo instead of Google, it doesn't matter what the "average Joe" uses.

But this is different. If all your friends use WhatsApp, you have no choice but to use WhatsApp. An chat network where you are the only one is useless.


> In the HN bubble lots of people have migrated to Signal with all of their contacts but outside of that bubble nothing much seems to be happening.

I’ve had a ton of non-tech people show up on Signal suddenly. I asked one of them why everyone is signing up, and he said because he doesn’t trsut WhatsApp.


Well, it means a lot for me. Until now I had to use WhatsApp because of a few groups I had there, now I was able to remove it because all my groups migrated to Signal.

For most of those, I didn't even have to initiate it, it was proposed by a less techy member than me.


My own experience: I've seen a few new Telegram users. I don't think I've seen a single Whatsapp user leave.


That's how it starts. Then one day you realize you haven't used WhatsApp in months, or you get an new phone and don't think about installing it...

I'm not saying this will happen soon, but it happened in the past several times with products with a strong network effect.

Think about AIM, MSN, Friendster, MySpace...


Gotta start somewhere...


I understand why FB needs to do this, but the execution was so out of touch it's bizarre. My elderly parents called me and were alarmed that WhatsApp is threatening with removing their account unless they agree to share their data. They wondered if FB will be able to track their transactions or perhaps even get into their bank accounts. After years in the tech industry, I've learned that my parents' feedback is a good predictor for how well my messaging will be perceived by the wider world. I would have assumed that at FB they would do something similar (or rather, that their testing is 100x more sophisticated), so it's bizarre that they would miss the mark with messaging and with their prediction of overall success when it came to something so strategically important and sensitive.


> the execution was so out of touch it's bizarre

This more or less describes Facebook's entire corporate ethos at this point. Almost all of their products are now clearly driven by PMs who are so focused on random metrics that they make various awful tweaks to the UX, all of which are clearly intended to drive some metric.

Case in point 1: Instagram replacing the "notifications" counter with a link to their "shopping" function that no one wants or uses.

Case in point 2: Trying to add a GIF on Facebook messenger opens up another entry point to Rooms, the video chat. No one is going to start a video chat from the keyboard, Facebook. (Then again, I'll bet 0.5% of users accidentally started one, so the metric is up! Ship it!)


I think when it comes to your point 1, they deserve a bit more credit - the prioritization of Shopping is a reaction to the threat of iOS 14-related loss of targeting capabilities. The only viable long-term response is to keep the entire user flow within the app, from click to checkout. While hiding the notifications will impact some engagement metrics, nothing is as important right now as achieving the above goal.


The thing is, how useful is an app with a shopping-button and no notifications-button, if no one uses it anymore?

Walmart would be way more profitable if every item was $100. But then no one shops there anymore.

So you need to walk the line between serving your users and serving your bottom line.


The notifications counter isn't _gone_, just moved to the top right on the home page next to the Direct Messages button. I didn't and still don't like the change but it's not catastrophic.


I did a semester of contract law at University and what they were trying to say is that in Software, we have the problem that we all got bamboozled by idiotic lawyer departments that apply to everything the same recipe.

It would be much better for everyone to give good willing contracts, more open and well-intentioned, that the current model of unenforceable but scary lock-everything clauses. It would however probably mean a change of business model.

Whatsapp could say "we'll never profit from you data, we'll only give them to law enforcement after review of the request and we delete all after 5 years", 3 lines and easy to enforce in front of a judge. In truth, none of those auto-approved contracts nobody reads can fully be trusted to be enforced by a judge. The excuse of "I misunderstood it and just clicked anyway to talk to my children" could very well be a defence. You can't say "if you breath, it means you accepted this contract of 2000 lines of legalese".

One day I suspect, at least the EU, they'll think of doing something where you can't deny service for non-respect of a new contract and will have to offer a multi layer service for each contract level. That sounds rational and I can't believe a company can lock me out of an email service or whatever just because I can't accept a contract change I don't even understand.


Well the crap implementations of the EU privacy regs brought in even more legal popups. It's like a website EULA. Sorry to say this, I know I'll be downvoted but it's the truth. They should've said no popups, popovers, notifications or otherwise annoying dialogs in the directive.


All of Facebook’s moves have been tone deaf for quite some time, perhaps intentionally so. I think they see themselves as too big to fail. It also seems like there’s something factional going on, the right hand doesn’t know what the left is doing.


Zuckerberg should've failed at FaceMash, but here we are.


My personal theory is that FB managers have been seeing complaints for years without a lot of follow through, and this has led them to believe that customer complaints were either overblown, or that they were too important for people to actually quit.

That or product got tunnel vision again. Wouldn’t be the first time that’s happened.


Not even a visible dent.

Here, in India if you mention SMS you get weird looks even from people who crossed their youth using SMS. Communication is WhatsApp here.

My physiotherapist, my doctor's nurse (who handles my appointment) they all function on WhatsApp, and no, they are even going to try Signal. Grocers, delivery people — it goes on. My bank and credit card relationship managers communicate with me on WhatsApp. They are never "migrating to" Signal.

I am the only one among my contacts who will be moving away from WhatsApp — everyone else (among my people who are using Signal sparsely or actively as of now) have WhatsApp installed and will keep it.

Most of my recent Signal convert contacts have already started replying on Signal after hours or days, some have uninstalled. Most of those people will soon uninstall it is what I expect. Unless Signal brings social features that makes these people experience FOMO of broadcasting their lives on one more network :)

Penetration of Signal in real world is way too different from what it "feels" here on HN.


During the time you were that, my son's daycare provider joined Signal. The network->tsunami effect is real and is currently happening in Switzerland. WhatsApp has burned their bridge to Swiss society, somehow. Shocking, but welcome.


Swiss person here. Over the last 2 weeks, dozens of my contacts (often total non-techies) have installed Threema and/or Signal. I've heard of a lot of family chatgroups moving away from WhatsApp.

WhatsApp has near-total market penetration in Switzerland. I hope this will change now, at least a bit. Until recently, you'd get strange looks if you mentioned that you don't use WhatsApp. (People sometimes assume that means you don't own a smartphone.)


That's curious, I thought that wouldn't happen anywhere Whatsapp already had dominance.


Here in Uruguay (South America) WhatsApp is the norm and you make all "digital errands" (even the grocery open markets and all kind of delivery services) with it. I have been annoying my friends and family for years to switch to Signal or even Telegram with little results and my obligation to remain fixed to it. Nevertheless, after this WhatsApp/Facebook ultimatum I was astonished to watch dozens and dozens of contacts migrating, and I knew it was my moment to delete WhatsApp before they get sweetened by the delay of the deadline until May, so they begin to use the other tools, too (I don't think the majority will delete WhatsApp, but it will be a great improvement if at least the personal conversations and contacts remain out of their claws). I really didn't expected to witness such exodus: people seem to be hypnotized by social media and Pavlov's bell -the dog is not to blame-, but maybe we could think that, although it takes a lot of time to appear, a critic mass is all that we need for a change. Businesses and government should be aware of that and don't take us for granted.


can confirm, i too am positively surprised that most people i meet are absolutely willing to switch.


Can re-confirm: the lady who brings my family raw milk just wrote to me on Signal instead of WhatsApp without me even asking. I'm positively drowning, happily, in this tsunami!!!


Same in Belgium. I don't use whatsapp, but had it installed. When I said I don't use it - people gave me weird looks and were annoyed. Now this has been replaced by a "oh so you use signal?" reaction.

The whole situation has seen mainstream media attention here, which helps a lot I guess.


> Swiss society

Of course. I was talking about an entirely different place with huge differences — from education to value of life (which is close to zero IMHO).


WhatsApp penetration in India isn't necessarily bad, given the size of the country. It gives a huge leverage to the Indian government: If they say they will block WhatsApp if they go through with the planned policy change, FB won't risk losing hundreds of millions of WhatsApp users.

Or they can go passive-aggressive: Mandate the exclusive use of privacy-friendly IM platforms for government and public services. If WhatsApp isn't compliant with the privacy requirements they set, tough luck. This will bring everyone onboard to another platform, and they can then individually decide if they'll also continue to use WhatsApp.


I am assuming you are either from here as well, or know about the country. Please tell me what would Indian Govt do if Zuck simply tells them they will get a tap installed at a place of their choosing as well?

> Mandate the exclusive use of privacy-friendly IM platforms

Ah no, you definitely are not from here :-) (no offence meant)


> Unless Signal brings social features that makes these people experience FOMO of broadcasting their lives on one more network

That's ultimately what it boils down to. Making an alternative messenger that people will use is one problem, but making one that people will use *instead* of WhatsApp is an entirely different beast. The former can be solved with new (non-privacy related) features, but that's not gonna be enough to overcome the network effect.

The really important question here is whether people really don't value their privacy that much or if they just don't know any better. If people really don't care, then there is no problem to be solved. If it's an uninformed decision, then this is not a technological problem but a societal one that can be solved with awareness campaigns for example.


Let's put it straight: majority of people don't give a damn on privacy. There should be a global pro-privacy campaign run by all of us to convince as many people as we can to respect their privacy!


Ok, it's only anecdotal, but if my little harmless gender-discriminatory way helps you convert more Indian Whatsapp groups then worth trying :). I've observed (in a completely non-scientific way of course) that in whichever groups that contains both men and women if a woman says "Hey all, let's move to Signal?", almost everyone will move quickly. If a man initiates that instead, you're going to get blank responses. So convince a woman in the groups ;)


> Penetration of Signal in real world is way too different from what it "feels" here on HN

But we should also remember most of the popular apps right now started with small bubble.

People like HN readers and techies is what going to influence non-tech people in long run.


Same in Brazil. Whatsapp penetration is probably 99% here - only paranoid hackers don't use it.


well i am that stupid guy who refused to install whatsapp. yes, i have heard that hundreds of times till now. even though the idea of "shadow profiles" my phone is already in facebook/whatsapp/truecaller DBs but i have never been able to accept that on a personal level. it just feels wrong doing it.

back in 2016 i decided to be the renegade and go to the shiny new telegram when everyone was over at whatsapp. took me years to convince 3-6 relatives to install telegram if they wanted to talk to me. wanted to avoid "whatsapp university" because everyone knows when unkills come to "chat". this meant that even today my messaging is on demand, if i want to talk to someone, i message them, reply and i close the app.

over the past month i have seen an explosion of "x joined telegram" and i told those relatives "remember how i made you download telegram back in the day, now i want you to get element because i am quitting telegram". that brought a few laughs.

my point is like yours. short of something catastrophic with whatsapp or facebook or instagram, people will not change because it requires you to download an app which takes 5 minutes. too much friction. /s


Just to add another useless anecdotal data point along with the rest: so far in the past month I have seen the bulk of my daily messaging contacts in the UK join Signal. Most of my existing conversation groups are still on WhatsApp but new chat groups are starting on Signal instead.

Where a request of 'can we do this chat on Signal?' would have been greeted with confused 'what are you talking about?' responses in December are now either not a problem or being answered with something along the lines of 'we would, but <X> is still only on WhatsApp'. This is not just techies, but parents in my kids school, biz contacts and investors, and even my retired parents who now use signal to chat and exchange photos with the rest of the family.

It is not much now, but that sound you hear above and those small chunks of rock and ice bouncing past might just be a growing avalanche. Social networks have faced this sort of threat before. Sometimes, like Google+, it fails to catch on and reach critical mass, and sometimes MySpace finds itself on the wrong side of the switch to a new default and disappears.


India is a huge market and there's a lot of people in India.

Isn't there a `made in India` alternative trying to get into that ?

> Penetration of Signal in real world is way too different from what it "feels" here on HN.

No, it's not that clear cut.

My only tech friend in my peer group is the one reluctantly moving to Signal while his SO and 20 of his SO's friends are moving to Signal. (sidenote: I asked about Telegram and the consensus seems to be "yeah but it's the united arab eminates, right ? no.")


> Isn't there a `made in India` alternative trying to get into that ?

Ok here's my proposed solution: 1. Be Indian 2. Create rebranded fork of Signal 3. Give it an Indian name and call it "Made in India" 4. ??? 5. Profit


> Isn't there a `made in India` alternative trying to get into that ?

All the alternatives I know are backed by for-profit corporations. So privacy concerns still remain. Few notable ones I came across are/were:

Hike (was shutdown last week) JioChat ShareChat


Although I advocate Signal over Telegram, it's funny when people equate Telegram to UAE when their tech team is in London, while they are only based in the Emirate for zero taxation.


Isn’t Signal run by some guy named Moxie Marlinspike who likes to be very secretive to supposedly protect his privacy? Signal is much more suspicious, IMO.


The CEO for a privacy-focused messaging app wanting to protect his privacy is suspicious...?


The leader of an organization that has a large impact on society, and potentially will have a very large impact on society and the world, being secretive is concerning and suspicious, yes.

Edit: Why? Because the public should know the people who have significant amount of influence in society.


This won't ever get anywhere.

The public doesn't know about Diffie Hellman or Brian Acton or Mike Schroepfer or Alex Halderman and yet here we are.

What else do you need to know about Moxie Marlinspike or Matthew Hodgson and Amandine Le Pape beyond their technical blogs, opinion blogs and conference appearances and the products they put out there ? To decide what ? What does it change regarding their work being done in the open ?

If you suspect them of something there's nothing in the world that they could say or put out that would convince you they aren't... what ? Why is being secretive suspicious and concerning ? What are you suspecting ? You already know more about their name and what they do and think that people who worked on covid vaccines and that has a significant amount of influence and society.


Again, why?



I'm from South Africa and about 70% of my family and friends have switched to using Telegram now with more people joining every week. Signal nobody uses unfortunately.


this is gonna sound like kinda dumb but i manage to keep my contacts off whatsapp by keeping my male friends hackers or others who respect privacy, and my female friends the type who i can convince to get the conversation going in a necessarily private direction. A lot of people did leave here in central america, guess we don't trust gringos so much after shit like ICE genocide


I have 3 (!) groups that haven't moved because of 1 person out of 5 or so that refuses and has a "I have nothing to hide, I don't mind targeted ads."-attitude (and tbh a majority of people that care just a little bit). The network effect is strong. It's annoying. I ask them to use another (almost exact copy of an) app, they ask me to share my address book (among others) with FaceBook (probably also among others).


That doesn't sound like the network effect, but rather granting a single person veto right over the privacy preference of the others. Just create the Signal group between the 4 of you and the network effect will ensure that democracy prevails


Taleb's thoughts on this kind of effect are quite interesting [1]. There's a kind "Tyranny of the Minority" where the group goes with the minority decision on something like this simply because the majority doesn't care _enough_.

[1] https://medium.com/incerto/the-most-intolerant-wins-the-dict...


But that doesn't fit with this example, the minority here is definitely ppl who switch to signal or want to use Signal as their main communication app.

Talebs arguments are more fitting in instances in which the cost of providing a different solution for a minority is too high and the cost (for some central provider) of just complying with minority demands for everyone is lower. Doesn't apply here at all.


I was referring to the friend who refused to leave WhatsApp not the broader global effect of migrating to Signal. For small group sizes the minority group’s preference will vary.


Well I could do so, but as said the majority won't really see the benefits of pushing so hard. They're willing to switch but not willing to advocate.


So, in other words is not one person who is pushing to remain on Whatsapp, but instead only one person pushing to leave.


I read that as "only one person who is pushing to remain on Whatsapp, and only one person pushing to leave."


Long before this recent flurry around Whatsapp (and Facebook in general) I duplicated one of my primary Whatsapp groups on Signal after getting most there to at least created an account.

Slowly, by only replying in that group and sending my messages there, I was able to move more of them over and finally the other group died which lead to the last individuals to come over to Signal.

It takes time, but can be done.


Whether it's doable depends on the time you can wait, and ultimately your objective.

Is it enough to stop using WhatsApp within one year?

Or should we be striving to migrate and delete our accounts before the policy change takes effect, to also prevent our historical WhatsApp data to be linked to our FB account?

I don't have a clear answer myself. Anyone more informed, please elaborate.


I have seen the same problem. I got 6 to 7 of my groups migrated (completely or partially), but some outspoken people who don't care (and arguably don't know better) prevent the 'upgrade' for everyone.


Signal is privacy focused at the cost of functionality and IMO the UI looks like programmer art - you might like the tradeoffs but I suspect most people won't.


As a long term Signal user, I also came to really hate it for all the bugs and flaws it has. All the encryption warnings become meaningless at some point, because someone is always having issues and refreshes the session or something like that. Does that mean we're getting MITM'ed?

You can't delete Signal contacts, like, ever. My signal address book and synchronized chats are flooded with plain numbers, or self-titled user names (which also invites for identity fraud...), because I deleted those contacts in my phone (which ofc I need to do, because it's used for privacy settings in other apps...). That's a problem for many years now, the github issues get closed by maintenance bots.

I am a somewhat tech-savvy person, but even for me the user experience leaves me annoyed and uncertain about some basic functionality you expect from messaging apps these days. I stopped recommending it to people some time ago. Don't want to blow my chances to migrate people to something fundamentally better.


Just out of curiosity, do you use iOS or Android?


Android primary, iPad and desktop clients linked.

Comically, every platform has different issues with "deleted" meta-info popping up again. Like "deleted" groups, "deleted" contacts, "deleted" chats... meta links I can't get rid off whatever I do. The worst is legacy groups I left, "deleted", can't even use or join anymore, but also can't get rid of. They reappear every time I refresh the iPad app. Mind you, the group members are still visible, so I am really happy whistle-blowing, terrorism or crime isn't my profession.

This made me really distrusting of Signal, when years old meta data popped up again. Like, have they lost some pointers or something? Can I even expect the data to be gone, when I delete my account for good? Doesn't feel like privacy at all...


> the UI looks like programmer art

The UI looks like iMessage. So it doesn't seem it should be any issue there.


iMessage has shitty UI though. Always strange being reminded it is used extensively in US, but then I remember people in US still send non-robot-made SMS (even robot-made are shifting here to messaging platforms though)


I don't really understand... Does WhatsApp have a better UI? Why?

To me signal is the best UI, and WhatsApp looks like a child designed it. Especially with the horrid default colors and backgrounds.

But I don't really see a difference in UIs in most chat programs. There are only two types of UIs. Point-to-point (signal, WhatsApp, imessage, etc) and room based (irc, matrix, slack).

Their all so similar, I don't understand what is better or worse in Signal compared to WhatsApp.


How many people would use iMessage if it wasn't bundled with the phone ?


What's wrong with iMessage?


Nothing, but there's nothing really compelling about it either. Don't get me wrong - the unassuming system design works great for OS app - but you wouldn't attract many users to it with the feature set it has


I don't really find that a very compelling criticism, to be honest. When I think about what kind of features I'd want in my messaging app, there are really only two things I can think of that iMessage doesn't have: encryption, and the ability to easily leave a group text. Add those two things in, and I'm there for life.

On the other hand, both of these things are essentially limitations imposed by SMS, at least when one end of the conversation is not an iPhone. Both can be fixed, at a small cost in complexity, and if they did that, I think it would hit a good balance between features, usability, and architectural complexity.


But you're a fraction of a percent of users who care about this. I guarantee you 10x more people are interested in having animated stickers.


Funny, most of my contacts that have migrated seem to be of the opposite opinion.

UI in general feels pretty much the same, but things like actual desktop apps with decent UX make a massive difference.


At least 90% in my WhatsApp don't even know what a desktop client for a messenger is...


One way I have got doubters to move a bit is to simply say "You don't have to use it, just install it on your phone and enable it - that way you aren't forcing people to use Facebook who don't want to".

I got quite a few people to put it on their phone using that line.


Look at it this way:

I never used WhatsApp. Friends and even businesses I dealt with always asked me if I had it, and why I didn't, and I was apologetic, but firm. Of course I was left out of oh-so-many groups and discussions in the past years, but I was never going to install or use that, I don't trust Facebook regarding privacy the tiniest bit and I think they always lied regarding which data they use and how.

Now I suddenly have so many people appearing on Signal, my wife was asked by their friends: "Hey, you weren't on WhatsApp, but I am now on Signal, so would you consider talking there?".

I admit, I did not push anyone anywhere, not even my wife. I'm past being an "influencer" and having to deal with "... but you told me to use this?!" - particularly my wife.

But just referring to the "network effect" and continue doing something you are uncomfortable with is being complicit IMO. You can control what you do, and do the right thing.


If I hear "I have nothing to hide, I don't mind targeted ads." I ask them to unlock their phone hand it to me.


Which is not the same thing at all, so it proves nothing.


> so it proves nothing.

Which, unfortunately, does not matter. You don't win arguments with proof, you win with persuasion.

Proofs are but one tool that can be used to persuade the other party, but if the proofs are not clear and quick, usually the other side will feel they are right - "they have won the argument"

On the other hand, a quote like this may well be persuasive to many, and they will feel you are right - "you have won".

This is not "the ends justify the means" - this is understanding how people argue.

There are those that argue on a purely intellectual level; Richard Feynman describes such a conversation with Einstein Oppenheimer and Bohr. But that was noteworthy enough for him to recall it twenty years later!


Hmm, didn’t Feynman have eidetic memory anyway?


I don't think so—I've read several of his books and it was never mentioned; neither his Wiki page nor the first several results for googling "feynman eidetic memory" support the claim. There's also https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_people_claimed_to_poss... , on which he is not.


Thank you. Obviously, I’m not on this Wikipedia list. :D


Not the same thing: you're a person they know, so it's privacy. Facebook, Google, 3 letter agencies do that invisibly.


The better way is to put that info on some private forums where some strangers will discuss it, since it's private by the same definition that's privacy.


Sounds like /r/relationship_advice on reddit or any of the many forums where people do post anonymized questions or stories.

Although “tracking” for ads is far less invasive than even that, the only particularly annoying thing is when it bugs out and shows you ads for stuff you just purchased and no longer need, it would be nice if they could track a little better and know once you’ve bought something.


I have multiple family members who made the transition from WhatsApp to Signal without any issue. I think the 1 in 5 stragglers are best left behind.


family is easier b/c of different social dynamics. there's no risk of losing a relationship to a family member over a messenger. you can just play it passively saying you're not using WA anymore but they are welcome to contact you via EMail, SMS or Signal, Telegram. with friends or rather acquaintances it's more difficult. you're easily being framed as a weirdo who tries to gain control over how people are communicating. soon you'll be "accidentally" skipped at invitations.


The great philosopher Groucho Marx considered that problem and came up with an elegant solution. If there was more room in the margins here I would include it.


Well, he wouldn't have that problem to begin with as he'd not be interested in being part of a group which would accept him as a member.


Whoosh!


"If you see a dumb comment that completely misses the point of the subject (for example someone not getting/taking a joke), then you type "whoosh" which means it went way over their head!"

https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Whoosh

for real? :D


> "I have nothing to hide, I don't mind targeted ads."

This is completely missing the point of why one should fight surveillance. Surveillance harms journalism and activism, making the government too powerful and not accountable. If only activists and journalists will try to have the privacy, it will be much easier to target them. Everyone should have privacy to protect them. It’s sort of like freedom of speech is necessary not just for journalists, but for everyone, even if you have nothing to say.

Copied comment from https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25824334


Preaching to the choir, shall I give you my friends' numbers so you can preach to them ;)


I think this mostly affects small groups. If the group is just 5 people, then one individual can prevent it.

For bigger groups (eg. the parents groups of my kids school) nobody cares if one or two people don't want to move. Especially since there most likely were a few people who already opposed WhatsApp in the first place.

So before there were a few people who weren't part of the group because of WhatsApp, and now there might be a few different people who aren't part of the group because of Signal.

You just need to convince a majority that your choice is better, and the terms of service change along with the constant bad press of Facebook was enough to tip the scales for many many groups.


For the big groups (30+) I didn't even try. I heard nobody talk about. I feel that these groups will treat a message about this as pure spam. These are not in any way tech interested people btw, just parents from the kid's school.


It probably makes sense to find one or two allies in the group (by talking offline) before proposing the change. I think that's how they did it for my older kids WhatsApp group.

(I'm not sure because I was one of the obnoxious parents who refused to install WhatsApp in the first place. I was a bit surprised when the group suddenly decided to move to Signal)


Any group treating my sincere concern and opinion as spam is no group I feel like I need to stay part of.


"I understand you have nothing to hide, I have nothing to hide too, but I still do not like giving my data to Facebook. Since in order to communicate we need to be on the same platform, and we both have nothing to hide, but I do not like Facebook, can we please use an app I am comfortable with?"


Just stop using it yourself, and don't concern yourself with who does or doesn't use WhatsApp.

Remaining on the service makes it more attractive and useful to the other users.


> moved because of 1 person out of 5 or so that refuses

move anyway, that people will eventually move because of the network effect


I've decided to finally roll my own matrix server, and configure bridges for the apps that fit into this "I have to use it because person x is too stubborn" category. It'll be a learning experience, and will skip all the "what do you have to hide, though?" conversations.


I must admit, I've been slow on the ball here as well. I just decided to move out, but I do struggle with having to persuade friends etc. Same attitude as you're referring to.


Leave that person behind.


Again, this is broken technology.

Data should be free to use whichever platform. The platforms should compete on features.

Imagine not being able to call your mate or family because they are on another telecom provider?

Someone fix this bullsh!t.


Leave them behind.


That's why ToS and privacy policy must be readable for John Doe. If it isn't clear what will happen with users' data, rumours and theories will grow. That will hurt your business like WhatsApp just shows (although I'm not sure Facebook will care all that much, to them it's just a drop in the bucket).


It's part of FB business model that the user doesn't really know what happens with his data.


I think Facebook would be unwise not to care, and whatever else they may be I don't think they're unwise.

All of their products trade on enormous network effects, so I think they'd be very aware of maintaining that barrier to entry for new competitors. They've stumbled badly on that front here, and once competitors gain a foothold it'll be hard to keep them out.


Network effect is the moat that is insurmountable according to those that believe big tech should be regulated like a utility.

If a new TOS policy with a bunch of legalese can damage the moat I would say the moat is pretty vulnerable.

It seems less clear that the market can deliver a solution for people that post untrue things on the internet.


> Network effect is the moat that is insurmountable according to those that believe big tech should be regulated like a utility.

The network effect in messaging apps is significantly lower than it is in other cases because people are not going to carry two brands of cell phone in their pocket but they very well might have five different messaging apps on their phone.

> It seems less clear that the market can deliver a solution for people that post untrue things on the internet.

It seems less clear that anything could do that ever.


It's even less clear if you would like that solution even if it exists...


I think the major threat to WhatsApp is not their ToS debacle but by national governments of countries like India or Australia. I imagine if Indian govt asks them to not enforce this ToS and WhatsApp does not oblige then comes a scenario where it can be blocked and all the govt needs to do is ask its citizens to start using Signal because except for the network effects, there is nothing in WhatsApp that can not be match feature wise in Signal.


Pay by text message. Integration with businesses. It’ll take a while before Signal is going to be sharing your details with businesses, since they’ve worked hard not to have your details. FB wants more of them. They don’t have my CC or account data yet...but wait.

I’m moving people to Signal too, but FB has a very good hand here.


Facebook has had 6 years already to integrate payments or businesses into Whatsapp, and they haven't. They haven't even added the ability to message someone without first entering them in your contacts.

They're not going to make it into a WeChat equivalent anytime soon.


In a group, hold the message, click more, click reply privately. Not in contacts.

https://www.whatsapp.com/business/api

https://www.whatsapp.com/payments


And if somebody gives you their phone number by another channel? For example there's a number on a classified ad, you want to ask if it's still available. Or a restaurant takes bookings via Whatsapp. I don't want to add them to my contacts, I just want to book.

Payments are not available in most countries, including countries where private communication are all on the platform.

And their businesses offer is extremely basic and doesn't have any penetration, even in places where 100% of people have the app. Why can't you search a business by name to contact them; why don't businesses put up a link on their website/Google Maps to start communicating with them? Why can't I scan a QR code on their ad and message them?

Where I live Whatsapp runs all private communication, and yet in 6 years Facebook hasn't even tried doing more.


My point is that they are obviously intending to go after both business and payments. If there is a gap it’s not because they don’t want to go there. If you’re judging them on what you can use now then you’re discounting a massive intent for change and a lot of money to make it happen.

Feel free to revisit this in 24 months. Facebook cannot afford to leave WhatsApp in an easily copied state.


I'm not sure I agree, but I certainly think it's possible that that's the bigger threat.

I don't think it changes the calculus, though. WhatsApp will be concerned with all serious threats to their market share, and I certainly would disagree with the position that diminished network effects isn't up there.


Correct. The future of the internet is multiple internets. For better or worse, It is not an open one.

The US govt fired the first shot with tiktok. Whatsapp / fb seems to be aloof thinking they are inmune from the fractured web


> The US govt fired the first shot with tiktok

Google, Facebook and Twitter have been blocked in China for at least a decade now.

Ref: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_websites_blocked_in_ma...


I agree. However my point was not to blame the US or take a position on virtue of the blocking of tiktok. Instead, want to point out a distinction: the US was the original proponent of the open web that most of the west would then follow.

China never hid its intentions to control information to its wishes.

China can do whatever it wants , but ultimately it is the US that sets the tone for the web. Arguably China did fire the first shot, and deserve to be condemned by it, but until recently most western countries would stand by the open web principle. I think the US (rightly) has said, we won't tolerate abuse any longer.

Ergo, this has given cover to other countries to question the wisdom of the open web. Its no longer the communist / authoritarian govts that can tap into this.

In other words, the web fragments when free countries decide its acceptable to block back the communists / dictators. I refrain from saying whether it is a wise move, I only posit that it looks inevitable at this point.

I can't edit my original post, but I think this would be more fitting: "USA fires back with the first shot among free western democracies".


but that's not cool to talk about and we should just ignore that and concentrate on how turrible the USA is all the time.


I don't think the Indian government wants everyone to use signal where all end-to-end convos are encrypted and Signal will refuse to open a backdoor for the Indian government. They would basically lose everyone at that point.


John Does don't read the terms in the first place so are probably still unaware of the changes


That's why networks are important.


They don't read terms because they are painful to read. If they just showed some small pointers highlighting the terms instead of long legal jargon, people will start reading them.


doing pretty much anything nowadays involves agreeing to cryptic legal jargon. much of the world revolves around it


« She said that update was intended to do two things: enable a new set of features around business messaging, and “make clarifications and provide greater transparency” around the company’s pre-existing policies. “There are no changes to our data sharing with Facebook anywhere in the world,” Sweeney said.»

This is worrying - does she say that the policy was updated to reflect what they already was doing?


WhatsApp and Facebook have been sharing metadata since about 1 year after the acquisition (so, 5 years already). They weren’t public about it, but they have acknowledged it.

I don’t know if that applies to Europe as well; they promised European regulators they wouldn’t, but (a) it was before GDPR, and (b) it’s easier to get forgiveness than permission.

If I had to guess, I’d say they have shared it for Europeans before GDPR and perhaps stopped since. Perhaps not. And perhaps they have this weird bug that copies WhatsApp metadata to Facebook, like many other accidental bugs that help their cause.


Facebook agreed to not share WhatsApp data with other products as part of the agreement that gave them the EU regulator's permission to take over WhatsApp. If they shared data, it would have been a breach of that agreement.


What would happen if the regulator finds you breach a predicament for a merge or acquisition?

Could, for example, Facebook be forced to sell WhatsApp (in the EU)?


They will most probably get a slap on the wrist in form of a fine.

List of highest fines: https://dataprivacymanager.net/5-biggest-gdpr-fines-so-far-2...



Those are data-protection fines.

AFAIK, Giving OK to Facebook buying WhatsApp was mostly an Antitrust issue.


They have shared data. I believe it was even acknowledged publicly (and especially now, with the “the tos change actually reflects practices”).

They’re ignoring GDPR and a variety of other laws; why would this agreement be different?


Because EU anti-trust violations give way bigger fines than GDPR violations.


That's a quote from the director of public policy for Europe, and the new terms don't apply in Europe.


Why should our communication belong to one company? Makes no sense to me. Therefore start using signal and try to spread the word. E-Mail is an open Standard. Instant messaging can be too!


Matrix is far closer to being "the email for instant messaging" -- Signal-like double ratchet encryption by default for private rooms, federated in a similar way to email servers (but much simpler to manage as an admin), much nicer group chat UX, simpler identity key verification (it has Signal-like QR codes but it also has emojicode verification which is nice if you're not in the same place when doing verification), has an open specification, multiple client implementations, a couple of still-in-progress alternative server implementations, it even has bridges (which have pretty decent UX) to other social networks like IRC, Slack, Discord, and so on.

Signal is far from an open standard. I use it and am quite happy using it, but with the knowledge that Moxie has publicly said many times that he does not believe in federation or third party clients (and will implement client blocking as well as using trademark suits if the problem gets big enough). And it's fine to have that opinion, I just disagree with it and you shouldn't sell Signal as something the lead developer has said they're explicitly against.

For folks saying (read: hoping) that Signal may become federated in the future -- I think it's a much safer bet to just use Matrix since it's already federated and has at least equivalent privacy guarantees (or even larger if you self-host your own server) and hope that Signal will peer with them in the future (which I personally think is about as likely as Signal becoming federated itself -- namely, it's very unlikely either way). But you do you.


> Moxie has publicly said many times that he does not believe in federation or third party clients (and will implement client blocking as well as using trademark suits if the problem gets big enough)

Well that's a shame - I wonder if, given moxie is a member of the HN community, he'd clarify what is meant by that. I had a quick search and didnt find anything.


[1] is Moxie saying that he is against third-party clients using Signal servers (meaning third-party clients cannot communicate with Signal users). [2] is Moxie saying that he is also against federating with other Signal servers (and implies that they use their trademark aggressively to stop the term "Signal" from being used by third-party apps).

Given how explicit he was about this at the time (and the lack of comments to the contrary in the past 5 years), I honestly don't think any clarification is necessary. That's his opinion and while I may disagree with his opinion, we shouldn't pretend that he is likely to change it in the future (or to imply that isn't his opinion on the topic). If you feel strongly that you want decentralised instant messaging, use Matrix (or something like it) rather than hoping Signal will become something Moxie has said he is against it becoming.

[1]: https://github.com/LibreSignal/LibreSignal/issues/37#issueco... [2]: https://github.com/LibreSignal/LibreSignal/issues/37#issueco...


Moxie Marlinspike gave a talk at 36C3 about the issues of decentralized systems and why Signal decided to not go that direction.

In short, his argument was largely chat ecosystems are constantly evolving but decentralized protocols tend to ossify. Thus, decentralized protocols will ultimately not be able to keep up with the demands of the users.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nj3YFprqAr8

Lots of people point to email as an example. I'd like to also point out the phone system and its codecs as another example. Most phone calls behind the scenes are using SIP to handle connectivity. SIP is codec agnostic, you could technically use any kind of codec in the RTSP stream. Its a very decentralized protocol, and highly extensible. And yet it seems like almost every time you try and place a call, the only codec anyone else supports is G.711, a codec released in 1972 and hasn't had a major update since 2000. We're slowly seeing G.722 adoption now that the patents have run out (HD voice on cell phones) but even then this is spotty. Meanwhile every other chat platform out there has moved on to more efficient and higher quality codecs because all it took was the chat platform owner to push one version update out.

The decentralized communications network is only just now finally adopting and rolling out a _33 year old_ codec. Sure sounds like a win for decentralized systems!


Why would Matrix have potentially larger privacy guarantees than Signal when self-hosted? As I understand it, when communicating with a user on a different homeserver, those chats are mirrored to that homeserver.


Because Signal has one (set of) servers which contain all messages sent through the Signal network. With Matrix if you are communicating with only a handful of people that either self-host or otherwise don't use Matrix.org then the largest homeservers don't even have a copy of your (encrypted) message history. In order for Matrix to be equivalent to Signal in this aspect, every single Matrix user would have to use Matrix.org (which isn't the case).


Getting into matrix is kinda hard. The whole website is full with tech jargon. The presentation needs to be MUCH more user friendly.


Right, the homepage definitely isn't built for regular people right now. The process for getting started seems to be:

    go to matrix.org > click "Try Now" > get redirected to element.io > click "Open in your browser" > allow it to use IndexedDB > create an account > start messaging
I have tiny grievances with every step of this process: matrix.org is filled with too much jargon; "try now" sounds like some kind of trial; redirections to totally different websites are scary; the relationship between Matrix and Element isn't clear; the stock photo-ish background on app.element.io is a bit tacky; asking for browser permissions on page load is rude; the account creation page makes the "edit homeserver" button fairly prominent but doesn't tell us what it does in plain language; I should have been told that you can invite people by email before I clicked "send a direct message"; adding an email to invite asynchronously pulls up a "terms of service" dialog.

There's a lot to love about Matrix, so I hope it becomes easier for people to get started with it.


FWIW I just tell most people to try Element. I can tell them about Matrix later. You can link them to https://element.io/get-started which is fairly good and skips a couple of steps.

The UX still isn't "great" or "delightful" but I have had people sign up and find be by email or matrix ID with no problem.



Matrix is interesting, but what does it have to make it succeed where Jabber failed?


Contracts with the german military and the french government.


> Why should our communication belong to one company? Makes no sense to me. Therefore start using signal

...this would make the problem you identify worse. Signal is one company.

> E-Mail is an open Standard. Instant messaging can be too!

It can be, but Signal definitely isn't.

Email and instant messaging don't actually differ in terms of what they're doing. They differ only in the social perception of what you should use them for. Why not use, say, Delta Chat, which is a messaging app frontend that delivers its messages by email?


They differ a lot. Email is more like a letter and is a killer app unto itself, chat has proven to be a thing that gets bolted on to something else. No chat client to date has ever been able to stand alone, and none of the early leaders ever amounted to anything.

Hell, Yahoo had entire verticals like ocean shipping self organizing around Yahoo Chat back in the day and never figured out how to monetize. Slack is going to be another salesforce widget.


I don't understand what you're saying. They're both asynchronous delivery of written messages. There are no length limits on either. There are no technical differences between them.

And they're both monetized exactly the same way, as part of a more comprehensive suite of office productivity offerings. People don't pay for Yahoo Chat the exact same way they don't pay for Yahoo Mail.


Sure there is. Email is an open standard, enabled by other other open standards. Things like authentication and service location are dictated by implementation. As a user, I can email anyone on the planet and retain those communications. My employer retains some email dating as far back as 1992, in native format.

Chat is almost always a closed loop. There are usually large implementations, and as a user I can only message within one. There are some exceptions to that. Chat always gets kicked around as corporate strategy changes. At work, I’ve probably used a dozen incompatible Microsoft solutions as their strategy meandered around. Jabber was the big attempt to make chat like email, and it failed.

Email still runs the world, despite its many flaws.


Email is a set of standards, sure. Instant messaging is a concept. Email is an implementation of that concept. There is already an open standard for instant messaging; it's email.


Signal is hosted over centralized servers, I don't think it's that much of a break from the status quo in terms of control.

That's not to say it's not the best out there. As a company, Signal is a million times better and more deserving of our trust than almost any other option on the market, but if we want to break out into open communications, the Signal protocol needs better decentralization.


In theory I like the idea of decentralization but in practice I haven't seen it work out well. For example email didn't become prolific until large centralized players became the dominant force. I see federation/decentralization being better as a late feature in software. Through centralization you can move a lot faster, which in the case of Signal is extremely useful. They wouldn't be able to provide the product they have with decentralization. That's why Moxie has been against decentralization. Maybe I'm wrong, but I don't see chat apps as having an unbounded number of features. As I see it once Signal moves into more of maintenance mode then we can talk about federation, by allowing outside servers being able to communicate to the main Signal server. But for now it seems better to focus on getting people to the platform and if we're talking about it from a privacy and security point of view, this is the higher priority. Decentralization doesn't provide much more security while Signal is still trustworthy. There's bigger fish to fry right now.


> For example email didn't become prolific until large centralized players became the dominant force.

What? Email was massively popular before gmail even got into the game. It was popular when Microsoft bought hotmail. It was so popular I remember a dial-up ISP (Juno) offering a free email-only dial-up account.

Email was one of the only easy to convey selling points for early Internet.

Online shopping was a shitty Wild West and most web pages consisted of some basic info and a visitor counter. But being able to send a “love letter” across the country in seconds was amazing!


> It was popular when Microsoft bought hotmail

I'm sorry, but is Hotmail not a large centralized player?


I think the GP was saying that email was already popular before Hotmail entered the picture. I agree with the claim that it didn't need centralized players to become popular.


I don't think this is accurate though. I wouldn't call the internet popular when it was just nerds on it. At least not in the context of what we're discussing (communication clients). That's not popular until the masses join. It is clear that the masses did not join until there were large centralized services like AOL, Netscape, Yahoo, and Hotmail that provided email services. I am fundamentally disagreeing with the premise that email became popular before large centralized players provided the services.


And you’re wrong. Email was the main selling point to get non-nerds online in the late 90s. It was how we got my mother in-law online, my uncles, and my non-techie friends.


For what it's worth I think you are wrong. Decentralization is a complicated technology that needs a lot longer to mature than I think most people realize. But once it is mature - and we're getting close, imo just a few years left - it'll move way faster and more efficiently than the centralized world ever did.

In many ways it feels like decentralization is the same as discovering the internal combustion engine before modern alloys existed. We have to invent a lot of extra stuff to make decentralization practical, and we will, but the vision definitely started many steps ahead of the technological progress.


XMPP was mature enough, Matrix is mature enough.

Technology is ready, what's missing is the goodwill of the biggest actors.


XMPP is mature. I think that the downfall is the complexity coming from having almost everything defined as an optional feature on a protocol level, and at a very fine granularity at that. So an implementation has to cope with situations where any other party it wants to communicate with may have an oddball collection of supported features. Plus, some server operators added their own peculiarities on top, like wanting to federate with some servers and not others and so on. The user facing result was a user experience with seemingly random inconsistencies. For example, user A can send a message to user B while user B is offline, but not to user C because C's server doesn't support offline message storage.


> For what it's worth I think you are wrong.

I'm happy for disagreeing opinions.

> But once it is mature

You may be right, and if it turns out that you are I'll happily change my opinion. But it seems like you agree that currently centralization is the way to go for an app like Signal. Honestly I'd love to see Signal decentralized, but I don't think it is the right move right now or in the near future. But given what you said I still don't think it means it is the right time to call for decentralization. Signal doesn't have to be the leader in advancing decentralization technology. They are already leading in secure and private communication and I don't think such a small group can be experts in too many things. They got their niche and I'm happy someone is doing it.

I'm curious though, why do you think decentralization will move faster in the future? What advantage do you see in that? I've always seen decentralization as lagging in updates because it is more difficult to get users to update and software can't exist in isolation (software rots).


Open data models allow for faster innovation and stronger collaboration. That's basically the meat of it.

Right now the cost outweighs the benefit but the cost is decreasing and the benefit remains.


Sure, you can potentially innovate faster, but unless you've got a good way of enforcing your changes on the whole network, one of two things happen. Either you either end up forking the network into multiple islands or building some crazy complex "negotiation" mechanism where two random clients need to agree on what features they support before they communicate.

We saw incompatible islands appear in decentralised systems before (this tends to not be good for users), and we've also seen how any implementation of "protocol/feature negotiation" is basically a disaster for security. I don't currently see how any truly decentralised system is lowering either of these costs.

WhatsApp never used to be e2e for everyone, but they were able to make it universal relatively quickly because it's centralised. All of the poster child decentralised protocols (SMTP, XMPP etc.) are still not e2e for everyone despite decades of effort.


I think in practice it won't be so much about agreeing on a protocol but rather new apps just parasiting off of the data models of the most popular and successful apps.

The thing about decentralization is that it forces the data to be available. So for example Facebook can't stop an alternative app from having full access to Facebook groups even if they want to.

So the big successful apps most likely end up deciding the data model and feature set, and everyone else just borrows that, and if they extend or add features those features won't appear on every interface. Which is okay as long as the common core (determined by the big app) is all there.


Lol. Email was the internet for most people when you were in diapers. It attracted federal regulation as early as 1986.

Decentralization is hard to build a business around.


I have an idea!

An app that aggregates all of your different social networking apps (think AIM, but for social networks). When you talk with your friends, each of your messages get sent to different social networks -round robin style- this only gives each social network a portion of the conversation. Your friends must, of course, also use the same tool to stitch the conversation back together.


There used to exist applications like this, at the time (i.e. the 90s) when apps didn't have automatic updates. What happens now is that the same company that runs the server and makes the official app updates them both at the same time to change the protocol, causing the app that supports all of them to break until they update it to support the new secret protocol. Then people stop using it because it's breaking all the time.


Social media aggregators intended to post messages to many clients have been tried before, but they have consistently failed because the social media companies, notably Twitter, changed their APIs to frustrate the possibility.


Seems similar to spread spectrum radio signals, also known as frequency-hopping. By hopping from frequency to frequency in a way that only the sender and the receiver know, you can avoid both obstacles and eavesdropping.


I have really bad news about how federated email is in practice. It turns out if gmail rejects you as a source of “spam”, you’re dead as an email provider.


email is federated, Signal is not, it may not be a company but it still is one entity that is pretty much in control of the communication and contact discovery...


Most of my instant message communication is still i.r.c., followed by XMPP.

I've read many times that the former is very much dying but I'm not seeing it in the channels I frequent.


> Therefore start using signal and try to spread the word. E-Mail is an open Standard. Instant messaging can be too!

Is Signal even open source? Where is the server code for this patch: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25803010 ?


Isn't [1] (one of) the patches fixing the issue? The solution doesn't need to be a server patch, in fact it appears it was a client-side patch to handle 508 errors properly as well as doing exponential backoff.

[1]: https://github.com/signalapp/Signal-Android/commit/c95f0fce6...


Does it mean that I can create a malicious client without that patch and break the server again?


The reason it was a DDoS was that every single Android Signal client in the world was retrying the API without an exponential backoff. If you intentionally try to DDoS the API yourself, then that's just a DDoS and you don't need a custom Signal client for that.


Email and (XMPP or Matrix ) Signal is also centralized, even if it's open.


No one is forcing to use you WhatsApp or the others. You have free will. These apps come and go and you can even come up with your own app and make others use it. Free market for you my friend.


Audience engagement follows Pareto distribution. For those saying "it's only 1 % or 0.1 %" – that could mean 10% of your overall engagement depending on who leaves


Before this, not many people had a reason to even think of having an alternative to whatsapp. Now, that conversation has begun and more folks are installing alternative chat apps. It's not an exodus, it's more of a transition. The main point is, the average Joe has realized there are other options beyond Whatsapp and is more willing to now explore them.


Which average Joe? I have 100+ friends on whatsapp, I asked some if they are planning to use another app and not even one knows what's going on. I assure you, 99% of the userbase click whatever popup comes blindly.


When announcing the delay in the implementation of their new TOS, WhatsApp wrote: “We want to be clear that the policy update does not affect the privacy of your messages with friends or family in any way”.

Note the careful wording regarding “the privacy of your messages with friends or family”:

- This excludes the privacy of messages with third parties (WA business)

- This excludes your privacy as a person (your communication behavior and all metadata)


I wonder if it's really lost users, or conversations. The article only cites download numbers declining in the various app stores.

Lots of people seem to have downloaded Signal or Telegram, but how many deleted WhatsApp? I don't plan on deleting it and I'm going to approve the new T&C or whatever it is, but I'm quite happy to migrate to Signal for my contacts who use both.

Presumably losing x% of conversations is just as bad as losing x% of monthly users for Facebook, so maybe this is moot, but it's still lazy journalism.


If we're doing anecdotes, I deleted my account after all my contacts moved to signal.


I instructed my family how to do it today, both deleting account, and deleting the app.

They'll go and tell the people in their groups, which in turn they'll tell theirs.

By this point they all have signal and/or telegram, and they've set it up themselves, parents included. Again, they are spreaders.

It's not like whatsapp is disappearing. But you can bet they're losing millions of accounts.


Call it toc insensitivity, or habit of last 20 years, but as soon as I saw that new TOC when I opened whatsapp about 20 days ago, I didn't even look at the button text, just clicked it as soon I read app.. of Approve. Wonders of auto pilot brain.


Shortly after I started online in '97 I had a multitude of messangers/chat tools on my computer.

Some people used ICQ, some AIM, some Yahoo. Some IRC. And so it is today. At work and in private context.

I feel we have come full circle in the 20 or so years.

Now I have Signal, WhatsApp, Telegram, FB Messenger, Slack, SMS, Google Hangouts, MS Teams on my mobile phone.

Not to forget that some use Instagram and some LinkedIn to communicate.

Nowadays I need to have a mapping table of whom to contact via which channel/app.


But at least you could get a unified messenger for those services way back when.

The user experience these days is much, much worse, for almost no technical benefit (yay, audio messages, great…). Separate apps, (mostly) required to have a phone number to use them etc.


This reminds me of what’s currently happening with Netflix, Hulu, Apple TV, HBO Max etc.

We’ve also come full circle with cable.


Not exactly yet. ATT is still at $139 (full package), I am using Hulu and sharing the pass with my family members, while they have netflix and sharing theirs with mine. $10 a month for me is not too bad to watch my fav Star Trek episodes on demand.

They can come full circle with anything they want at this point, worse case scenario I will torrent the hell out of everything and plex it with my nas if I am pushed enough.


Yes, I had hope in the early 2000's with XMPP, but considering 20 years later we still have a fragmented ecosystem and none of the actors are willing to push for a federated network (even the open source, NPO, Signal!) is really depressing.


Well this is no accident. The whole of HN has been Signal jerking for weeks now to the point where it is really obscene, with no consideration for the inherent flaws of Signal. If a community of supposedly technological savvy people care so little for what matters then we won't get something better, and in that case I'm sticking with WhatsApp unless others go to XMPP or Matrix.


whole hearted agree.

additional reminder that fb-messenger, whatsapp, imessage and probably a lot others started out as xmpp forks/dialects and even this was not enough to save us from the corporates.


Theres an xkcd for that, of course: https://xkcd.com/1810/


Thanks so much. Missed that one and loved it instantly.


There's so much of misinformation spreading about what exactly was going to change in privacy policy of WA. For instance, there's rumour that fb will be able to read messages, shared location etc despite having E2E encryption (how's that possible? backdoor?). could someone please decode the proposed policy of WA?


To me, it's not about the actual changes to the privacy policy. This was an opportunity to educate people about the existing risks of a very large advertising company having access to your contact list, and what alternatives were available. Most people didn't even know that Signal is open source and being developed by a non-profit until the WhatsApp concern popped up.


How do you know it's misinformation if you need a decomposition of the proposed policy itself?


because there are multiple viewpoints given by people, various publications, and later fb itself towards proposed policy and they all can't be right. It's a prime example of spreading misinformation.


They should have been nice, instead of communicating agree with their terms or go and delete your account.

It's a lesson. No matter how big you are. 1. Communicate for understandability. 2. Don't take your customers for granted. 3. Change is hard, nudge them towards it instead of a push.


Can confirm. Deleted WhatsApp the day the TOS-changes-dialog popped up. Got a number of "So-and-so is now new in so-and-so" messages from telegram and signal. This is not just a HN bubble. Many people in my network just dumped WhatsApp and moved on. Good. Downgraded my mother from WhatsApp to SMS regarding contacting me, which is actually an advantage since now she can't share stupid videos with me anymore. All in all, win-win for everyone.


The last two paragraphs make me very happy.

I am tired of most (non-tech) mainstream news outlets blindly regurgitating Telegram's "encryption" claims, or mentioning Telegram in the same clause as Signal under the umbrella of "more secure alteratives".


It doesn’t account for this, though:

>> To protect the data that is not covered by end-to-end encryption, Telegram uses a distributed infrastructure. Cloud chat data is stored in multiple data centers around the globe that are controlled by different legal entities spread across different jurisdictions. The relevant decryption keys are split into parts and are never kept in the same place as the data they protect. As a result, several court orders from different jurisdictions are required to force us to give up any data.

Thanks to this structure, we can ensure that no single government or block of like-minded countries can intrude on people's privacy and freedom of expression. Telegram can be forced to give up data only if an issue is grave and universal enough to pass the scrutiny of several different legal systems around the world.

To this day, we have disclosed 0 bytes of user data to third parties, including governments. >>


Why should they account for it? Telegram's marketing blurb sure sounds nice but at the same time is completely impossible to empirically validate from the outside, just like WhatsApp sharing (or not sharing) your data with Facebook.

So why trust someone when others have an architecture that lets us actually verify their claims?


Too early to judge. Let's talk again in 3 month.

Judging from my experience, people do not leave, they simply install new communication channels. They want to stay connected, are curious. Appeal of a new app, other features. SnapChat, TikTok etc. also didn't kill facebook, they augmented it.

Remember Bleeper? The search of the umbrella messenger. Welcome back early Instand Messangers from the 2000er years. ;)


I'm not an expert in antitrust, but I feel like this gives Facebook a stronger defense against governments trying to break up the company.

"Look at all the other messaging options out there with millions of users! If people don't like our decisions, users have shown that they can easily leave us for our competitors."


Anti-trust isn’t as simple as “look how easily users can switch”. Microsoft got busted despite how easy it was to get another browser because they leveraged their position of power to push IE.


Unfortunately anti-trust has become synonymous with whatever scores the administration at the time feels like settling.


I joined Signal and maybe 5% of my contacts are on signal as of right now. I don't think the critical mass is there yet, but I hope more people make the switch. I effectively cannot use Signal unless my main contacts are on it, which they aren't. The best thing I could do is try and convince all of them to move to signal so we can group chat on Signal instead, but it's a hard sell, despite the fact that most of the people I actively talk to are in tech or academia.

I think many people are probably fine with moving from Android messenger or WhatsApp, but it is going to be extremely hard to convince the Apple folks to stop using iMessage (or whatever they call it). Apple has also been working hard (e.g. green texts) to ensure that people stay on or convert to iMessage.


Why do you want people to stop using iMessage?


The short of it is group chats lose functionality when even 1 non-apple user joins, and apple works hard to make sure you can't use imessage on other devices.

It's so frustrating. I want to like apple and their approach to privacy, but then they do stuff like this that alienates non-apple users.

Anyway, imessage is like a caveman compared to messaging apps like Kakaotalk and LINE. Those have more features and I like group chats on them much more than I do on imessage. Not that I had a choice; I don't think I ever got my Korean friends' actual numbers because everyone uses Kakaotalk.

[0]: https://www.androidauthority.com/green-bubble-phenomenon-102...


Besides all the other reasons already mentioned, its security model is somewhat dated. For example, it does not use forward secrecy, neither for chats nor for 1:1 calls. (Group calls do have forward secrecy.)

That said, I still use it over Signal when I can – cross-device messaging is very hard, UX wise (which device receives the notification, does "mark as read" properly sync across device, how is the behavior of a device coming back online after a while etc.), and Apple has almost perfected it at this point.


1) No disappearing messages 2) your messages sent to other people get backed up to their icloud 3) no cross platform support

#1 being the most important to me.


Disappearing messages can always be snapshotted arent they? I fail to see their point ?(earnest question) by snapshotted, either with system snapshot or another phone?


That’s not the issue. The issue is so that the messages don’t get backed up or left on the phone if the phone is stolen or lost.


For one, it happens to be a walled garden.


Because it's ios only?


This feels different. My non-tech friends, who I've been badgering to switch to Signal for years with no luck, suddenly just all started agreeing to switch.


Same situation in my circles two weeks ago, but the hype has died. Folks are back on WhatsApp. Some even moved to Telegram, which is a downgrade from WhatsApp, in terms of privacy. Signal's ranking on the app charts has fallen as well, that it's below the top 10 list.


As Facebook bought WhatsApp after a few years when WhatsApp got big enough what's to stop another huge corporation to buy Signal or Telegram when they become big enough? Because it will happen, it always happens.

Whats to stop the cycle?


Signal is a nonprofit, does not store metadata, and is likely not for sale.


All great things when they are small. Many small organisations have noble aims.

When they have 2 billion users what's to stop change? We see it all the time.

But I'm talking more generally here: how can we structure our organisations to be resistant to take overs?

Foundations? Cooperatives perhaps? We've seen with some coops (most mutual banks/building societies in the UK) you just need to pay enough members some money to remove the restrictions


WhatsApp's biggest problem here is that their best defence is to note they were already doing lots of things users were worried about before these new terms.

That's not a great message.

Facebook baffles me sometimes. You'd save yourself so many policy headaches if you'd let some things be turned off, because nobody (i.e. not detectable numbers at FB's scale) would use it, but you could always point towards that ability when criticised. Just let people manage the data used for friend suggestions. Let people switch back to a chronological timeline, and give them filters.


Anecdotally, my entire EU rolodex has shifted from WhatsApp to Telegram and Signal over the past month.

Now, my friends-and-neighbors lean heavily towards the software industry, so this most likely does not translate immediately across WhatsApp's entire EU user base.

On the other hand, software people tend to be on the leading edge of new trends in technology.

Europeans tend to care a lot more about privacy than their American counterparts, and I doubt that Facebook's rather ham-fisted approach towards EU markets and their associated regulators is going to play well in the medium-to-long term.


"You won't be required to login to your Occulus Rift"

"You won't need Facebook to use Whatsapp"

"You won't need Facebook when I'm president"


Besides the terms update, the recent Facebook censorship in the USA has pushed many people to migrate away from WhatsApp just because it is owned by Facebook. BTW, I deleted by WhatsApp for this reason and convinced my family group about it too.

My wife and her family also migrated to Signal for yet another reason. The audio quality of the voice calls is much better.


I received the popup a couple of times to accept the new TOS and rejected it each time, but it has stopped showing itself. I fear I may have accidently accepted it. Does anyone know how can I check what my TOS-acceptance status is (whether my device thinks I accepted or not)? I really do not consent with Facebook owning my address book.


We can see from past examples that market share has big inertia. Even in cases where the top choice was under performing by a large margin it took years for majority of users to make the switch. Think about examples like Internet Explorer, Yahoo Mail, Windows on servers, etc.

We can also see from those past experiences that at first a very small minority of - let's call them power users - made the switch when otherwise the underdog seemed hopeless. But from them the infection spread. I think power users are also "influencers" and are worth a lot more that one single normal user as far as market share goes.

Now, functionally, WhatsApp is still good. So it's not clear if this will lead to anything. But something happened, there's no denying that.


My plan to help make this happen is just to respond to any WhatsApp messages with “You can find me on Signal... https://signal.org/install” people seem to be installing it so far.


I've set my Whatsapp status to "I'm not using WhatsApp anymore, please contact me on Signal or on this email: ..."

and uninstalled WhatsApp


I just migrated one of the gaming groups that I'm part of to signal and it works well. if someone pings me on whatsapp i ask them to install signal and some people actually did.

but like others said, i still have whatsapp - i just open it rarely.


Misleading headline, it says: "WhatsApp loses millions of users after terms update"

without single proof in article other than number of installs of competing apps

if you wanna show how many users Whatsapp LOST you must show how many users DELETED their Whatsapp account

just because someone install other app alongside Whatsapp means nothing and majority of these users will just return back to Whatsapp when this temporary hype dies

by this logic every major game loses millions of users after release of other major apps ignoring fact you can play more than one game and have them all installed


I've been using Signal for a long while -- most comments I see here already mention enough similarities/differences, so I'll just add one that drove me there first:

- WhatsApp still does not have an iPad native app that talks to its servers without any interaction with my phone.

Yes, I can use the web version (and have the desktop one on my Macs), but Signal just worked on all my devices (including my iPad) from day one of my adopting it years back, and it is embarrassing that WhatsApp never really bothered.


It's a source of some significant regret that Keybase was acquired by Zoom, and the subsequent loss of street-cred that ensued - as I'd swung a few groups over, and really appreciated some of the features (you don't need a mobile phone number, you add / block people as needed (not phone numbers out of your contact list), and the effectively syncthing-alike feature of a synchronised file system you could share with specific persons or groups of persons.)


I don’t think they really will lose any users, and in fact this whole saga is a big loss for privacy. FB will see that there is a lot of discussion but at the end of the day no real loss is users or traffic and so realizes it has a large moat and so don’t have to do anything to improve privacy.

I tried really hard to move people away but they always come back to it, particularly for groups across continents WhatsApp is really entrenched.


Just anecdotally, only one of my chat groups on WA have moved over to Signal an that's because it's a group of four of us (we are long time friends who use the group to talk about our favorite sports team)

With my other far larger groups it's been a struggle to get a majority of members to care enough about this.

The reality is that most people moving to Signal/Telegram will end up having to keep WhatsApp anyway.


It's the same for me, lots of people came over, but not everyone (especially large groups). WA is particularly entrenched in the Netherlands, so it's difficult to get to the point where you can completely remove the app.

But I still consider what's happened so far a major win. Breaking the monopoly WA has on text messaging is important.


It’s not just the numbers, it’s who they are. Having a good portion of the tech/media scene move to Signal, even if it’s just conversations and intent, shifts the needle. Impact is more influential than most other segments.

I do worry about the move to Telegram. I’ve seen large law firms and privacy experts defend WhatsApp in comparisons to Telegram. I could easily see WhatsApp get those users back.


This mainstream concern with privacy is somewhat ironic, considering most people already put all their personal info on Facebook and Instagram


Personal info is not the same as my constantly generated stream of data.


Got my family group chat moved to signal by some minor miracle which is 99% of my traffic. Still don’t think I can delete it though


A question that intrigues me is this - from the article:

"Niamh Sweeney, WhatsApp’s director of public policy for Europe, the Middle East and Africa, told the home affairs committee"

Why would WhatsApps director be speaking with the home affairs committee?

Concerning that they are taking such an interest, is it not?


Before we jump to conclusions:

1) Downloads are not usage.

2) One month _in one country_ is not a pattern.

3) If we believe WhatsApp has two billion users, "millions" - while subjectively significant - is objectively minor (at this point).


It is amazing how Facebook is sure about power of it's and Messanger network effect, that it sacrifices WhatsApp to advertise the company transparency.


I use element/matrix because I don't want to need a phone to use signal. But signal seems to be the most "migrated to" alternative.


Personal experience (Germany, non-techie contacts):

- about 20% of my active conversations have now moved to Telegram

- about 5% of my active conversations have now moved to Signal


Who else got a Google Play notification about this 'communication app' suggestion who turned out to be WhatsApp ?


Drop in the bucket. I'd say 95 % of users probably didn't even think twice about the new terms and conditions.


Friends don’t let friends use Facebook.


Whichever app I am using is taking my data. My privacy is not anymore. I don't cry about anything.


Vegan alternatives are in all restaurants now. Vegans simply refuse to eat animal products.


They have 2 billion users though, so I doubt they care if they lose a couple percentage.


Privacy policies are unenforceable because social lock-in means you can't leave even if you eventually decide the new policies are bad for you.

I don't want Facebook to get my list of contacts, but I also don't want to lose touch with my extended family. Guess which one is more important to me?


Belief that you depend on Facebook to stay in touch with your family is so misguided and sad.

No matter where you live in the world, you don’t need Facebook, not at all, not one bit. It requires absolutely zero extra effort to stay in touch to exactly the same degree, see all the photos, send all the messages you want, with dozens and hundreds of other global services that all your contacts, even tech-phobic grandma, already can super easily interact with.

I have never had a Facebook account, yet I still keep in touch with all the many contacts in my network from high school, college, past jobs, global extended family, immediate family, OSS project acquaintances, etc. etc. - all with zero Facebook.

This utterly false myth that Facebook is necessary, or even the slightest bit important or even useful, to keep in touch very closely with all the photos, comments, etc., really needs to die.

You can completely delete Facebook on a whim right now, and 100% of all that stuff is just as immediately, easily achievable right away with zero loss or deficiency from removing Facebook.


Whilst I agree with the sentiment, I disagree with the message.

If I don't message my sister via Facebook she won't see it. She doesn't do email for private stuff and she's not going to install another app.

If I don't message my mother via WhatsApp she's not going to get it. She doesn't understand what the fuss is and WhatsApp is already complicated for her.

I'd love to be able to message people with zero extra effort but the fact is it's a non-zero amount between us and in the end I'm the one who has to go the extra yard.

I know this because I've not had a FB account in over 7 years now. Facebook's not necessary but it sure as hell is easier.


This is just a lie Facebook wants you to feel. Your sister and mom care about you, they will easily prioritize their family member over specific apps.


How exactly do you think Facebook are telling me this lie?

You realize that I am speaking from experience not hypothetically; I don't have Facebook and there's been a marked decrease in both the number and frequency of messages from my family who rely on it.

I really wish this wasn't the case. The vendor lock-in with Facebook is really significant and I think those of us who leave the platform have to acknowledge that.


The sad part is that people tell this lie to themselves and resolve not to put forth any attempt to stay in touch, just accept “falloff” by others as evidence of Facebook lock-in. Facebook doesn’t even have to tell us this lie and use propaganda to convince us - we tell ourselves the lie!

Speaking as someone who never had Facebook, I’ve experienced zero loss of connection with anyone in many networks of family, friends, colleagues, etc. Just a simple email thread to share stories and photos here or there, phone calls, SMS text chats or other apps. It’s so easy and seamless to stay in touch with no part of it involving Facebook.


I really feel comments like these come from people who haven't successfully actually quit Facebook. There's a real heavy cost to not being on Facebook and most people don't feel the dependency because they've convinced themselves they can quit at any time.


No, there is not a heavy cost. It’s just a perception and myth to keep more people reliant on Facebook.


I deleted WhatsApp and moved to Signal and many contacts followed. Not all, but most. If the momentum continues, then the rest will follow.

Viral growth and shrinkage means this is one case where being the change you want to see can have immediate effect.

If you can, try it. If it doesn't work, you can always go back to WhatsApp in a few months.


A lot of people have had success moving their friends to signal, and that I think that is very encouraging. Well done to you, and certainly I'm trying to do my part as well.


This one I never quite understood. I could bet five bucks all of your extended family on facebook has email addresses.

Facebook seems indispensable in finding the people you're after, but maintaining contact doesn't seem to require it.

Or is it their updates posted to the entire world that you're after?


Of course you can still contact them, but it will be harder and people will include you less in their conversations.

Whatsapp does a lot more than what regular sms does, including working video calls across platforms, working multi-person chats with file attachments, etc. Don’t say e-mail does this, it doesn’t, as you will need more than a phone number that you already have.

Here everybody asumes that you have it, if you don’t, you’re on your own. As an example, my communication with my car insurance company over an incident I’ve recently had is happening over Whatsapp.


I think it's only a couple of percentage if you round up.


38, living on the east coast USA: I don't know anyone who has ever used WhatsApp.


If work doesn't ping you on WhatsApp then you'd already have moved out.


I'd be surprised if many of them didn't just come back. It's kind of hard to give up talking to your friends or being part of some group who communicates in a whatsapp shared thread


Anecdotal: my tight group of 12 tech-unsavvy friends very trepedatiously migrated to Signal after the terms update and I said I'm bailing on WhatsApp whether you're coming with me or not. As soon as the group came over, I got tons of "wow, I like Signal better!". Then the outage happened and I was worried, but everyone stayed and I strongly doubt will go back. Though some do keep WhatsApp for other friends, I think our litte migration will actually cascade into more.


I'd agree with this - so many of my non-tech friends are now on signal and seem to like it. The traction that Signal is getting right now feels like its the classic word-of-mouth organic growth that snowballs quickly. I bet their engineering team is getting stretched right now.


> I bet their engineering team is getting stretched right now.

Last week servers were unstable for about 24hrs. But they did grow by about 10x in approximately a week's time, so that's not entirely surprising. I think it's more surprising that they've been so stable so far.


100% this. That's what I mean - I bet their team is just slammed with all that growth and pressure on their systems.


A group of my tech-unsavvy friends were enraged by the privacy policy update and decided to move from Whatsapp too, but decided to move to telegram instead, in spite of me warning that telegram is not encrypted and that if privacy was your concern you should consider signal. I bet they didn't read the privacy notice update and I wouldn't be surprised if they got their information from some Whatsapp forward that misinformed them about the actual contents of the privacy update, ironically. Turns out there's a lot of misguided and uninformed people too perhaps worse off now than when they used Whatsapp in terms of privacy considering telegram isn't end to end encrypted.


How technical is that group? My family isn't and they've noted a few times that Signal feels sluggish(therefore not enjoyable) to them and missing stuff they enjoy on WhatsApp, like statuses.


The shift over the last few days is that where WhatsApp was seen as the default way to communicate, Signal now became the default. I'm still on WhatsApp but reduced my usage by 95% in favor of Signal now that most of my thread or individual users switched to Signal. It will take time but hopefully WhatsApp will become irrelevant in the long run.

It was very entertaining seeing all my group chats move one by one to Signal now that there is a critical mass of users that agree that it is the right choice. I tried to make it happen in the past and it was too much a pain to convince people that Signal was way better than WhatsApp.


I agree few people are going to switch immediately and permanently, but I reckon they've created a long-term drain on their userbase. The policy change prompted me to finally download Signal (as apparently it did a lot of people), and while I'm currently using both side-by-side and will continue to for the foreseeable future, given the choice I'll be suggesting Signal from here on out.


looks like facebook is getting a lot of pushbacks recently. VR too.


*temporarily


That's amazing! It means millions of users have some idea about digital privacy, actually value it and are ready to do something for it.

I used to pessimistically believe that's just a handful of geeks.


> Signal has gained 7.5 million users globally

It does not mean they use Signal. Because of the bubble, many of my friends have installed Signal, including myself, but continue to use Whatsapp. I personally use whatsapp only for very close people and I don’t want to break the chat history so switching to any other app is a bit disconcerting.


I have installed Signal and do not use it because none of my friends are on it yet. A critical mass is required before I can start using it. You can't migrate group chats from platform X to Signal until everyone in the group is on Signal. This isn't bad news really, as long as people continue installing Signal, eventually I'll be able to start group threads on Signal. I guess it is only a matter of time, assuming more people continue downloading Signal. I think the easier sell is to just get people to install it -- they don't have to use it right away. Then the early adopters can start group threads and chats as they become possible, which will start the shift from other platforms to Signal (assuming people continue installing Signal, of course).


I don't see any advantage of moving from WhatsApp to Signal or Telegram. From a privacy / security point of view, WhatsApp seems to be better than Telegram, and on par with Signal. What exactly is the reason to change apart from wanting to be hip?


> on par with Signal

Whatsapp's metadata is used by Facebook to manipulate you into buying their customer's products. That's the whole reason they run the app actually.


How about not allowing Facebook to spy on you?


How does using WhatsApp help Facebook to spy on me? It's end to end encrypted. I haven't used Facebook itself for more than 10 years.

In Telegram, you have to switch on "Secure Chat" to get the same kind of privacy. So people switching from WhatsApp to Telegram is somewhat ridiculous.


It may be end to end encrypted, but you've got to remember that the client at each of those ends is controlled by Facebook.


So would you say that according to their terms of use they could just upload my messages to their servers for data-mining?

If you would say so, you would be wrong: https://faq.whatsapp.com/general/security-and-privacy/end-to...


Remember when WhatsApp were all "Yes, we're being bought by Facebook, but we're going to preserve your privacy"? https://blog.whatsapp.com/setting-the-record-straight

At some point, words become meaningless platitudes that are simply invalidated by the next big ToS update. Facebook have a major incentive in being able to read our messages, so I fully expect them to march in the direction of figuring out how to sell the the walkback of e2e in the future. It'll be dressed up as for our "safety" or so that their "partners" can add some sort of "value", but it will come.


i think he was saying that there is nothing preventing fb from having the wa-client piggyback the content of the messages back to them and call "oops" if found out.

also the issue of device-backups containing the unecrypted message history which is beeing shared from google to facebook.


Your first point is against their terms of use. So, that's preventing them to do something like that. But sure, if you think that Facebook will break the law here, switch.

For your second point, how would Google ever get my device backup? I guess if you are using Android and worried about your privacy, what you should switch is not your messenger app, but your OS.


agreed i sound a bit pessimistic here, but companies regularly show that the only thing that matters is the bottom line, so i stand by the assertation that breaking the law/eula is not really a question of ethics.

second point; you and i may not be using android and google backup, a vast majority does.


Metadata.


People don't like Facebook for various reasons.

Misconceptions, misinformation, FUD, ignorance... See other posts, some of the things that have been circulating are indeed quite frightening... If true.


I don't really read conspiracy theories.


You may not, but plenty of others do, some do it without realising themselves doing it.

BTW, I meant to say two different major reasons, should have used bullet points.

The two reasons may overlap for some, or many.


Another Signal jerking thread, spare me. At this point I am so sick of hearing about Signal that I will also insist people keep using WhatsApp. I'm not moving to something which is basically WhatsApp but this time with someone you can "definitely trust" because "reasons".


The worst thing about Signal is that it was probably some some sort of CIA/NSA initiative.

It could be a simple honeypot, or just a way to make users feel like they are not listened to: once the app is created, you have to insert some very subtle coding error, like heartbleed (a missing semicolon), if you can manage to hijack the computer of one of the signal team. I doubt that a benevolent team of developers can match the expertise of the NSA.

Of course, most users don't really have to care about such security flaws since they're very advanced issues, and most users care about their privacy.

Meanwhile, I honestly would like to voluntarily submit my interests so I can choose what ads I would like to see. Advertisers should do that.




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