> Completely agreed about the nonsensical first claim. We have many third-party clients for other messaging platforms where privacy and security are a primary feature.
I can't think of an any with independent implementations.
For instance, have a few third party Signal clients, which work by using the official libSignal . These are not third party clients, but third party GUIs. Use of libSignal on the official Signal network is also not supported or recommended.
Likewise, all the third-party Telegram clients I know of are forks using Telegram source.
This makes sense, because neither of these are stable systems. A third party has to stay up-to-date with features and changes made to the official servers and clients.
Do you know of a security and privacy focused messaging platform which is both:
1. documented
2. has multiple independent implementations of the networking and security protocols?
I suppose it is determined by where you set the bar, even more so with privacy which still varies person-to-person and can sometimes take a qualitative feel.
Security wise, there is interesting work adopting MLS (and I believe key transparency) under Matrix, see https://arewemlsyet.com for example.
I can't think of an any with independent implementations.
For instance, have a few third party Signal clients, which work by using the official libSignal . These are not third party clients, but third party GUIs. Use of libSignal on the official Signal network is also not supported or recommended.
Likewise, all the third-party Telegram clients I know of are forks using Telegram source.
This makes sense, because neither of these are stable systems. A third party has to stay up-to-date with features and changes made to the official servers and clients.
Do you know of a security and privacy focused messaging platform which is both:
1. documented
2. has multiple independent implementations of the networking and security protocols?