Spyke

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15 replies

lemdro.id

Unfortunately WhatsApp managed to take hold of the Zeitgeist during the early 2010s when some European carriers were still charging for texts or charging lots for data.

The fact Meta was allowed to buy WhatsApp is a travesty. We're supposed to just trust that Meta isn't lying when it says it isn't looking at the E2EE keys? Come on. We have literal governments using it as a communication tool.

38
lemmy.world

Not Europe, but the non-western world. Ask anyone from Brazil or the Philippines.

8
DosDudereply
retrofed.com

But also Europe. In the Netherlands the amount of sms is still limited

5
ranzispareply
mander.xyz

European carriers are still charging for sms messages. Luckily RCS now kind of exists.

2

Yes and no. All plans still include SMS but they're very cheap, sadly they're not much used anymore cause everyone uses WA or other apps. Some don't even read or respond to SMS, which is maddening to me because what's the fucking difference?

1

It's a day I wouldn't even notice something special. As I never used that piece of shit excuse of an app. Fuck Zuck.

5

Whatsapp is just more shitty Meta product... Can't be trusted.

Meta is just more shitty Facebook rebranding... Can't be trusted.

:)

13

I'd love to have no WhatsApp in my life. Many years ago, I signed off it as I did with Facebook. Sadly, because of where we are at the moment, my partner is now the main hub for communication with businesses and people who don't care about or aren't aware of Meta's privacy practices. After many arguments, I'm now being forced to share the communication responsibilities and reinstall WhatsApp.

For those who can, I read a suggestion once that struck me with its simplicity: turn your account into a business one and set an automatic reply letting anyone who messages you know that you've moved permanently and how to find you.

7

Let’s start by understanding the sheer scale of WhatsApp. The Meta owned and operated messenger has roughly 3.3 billion monthly active users

Had to reread that, cause Messenger is also a Meta chat service ...

7

Here's my thought experiment: nothing changes.

I have literally never used it. I have one very simple rule for chat apps that I hold to over everything else. The user identifier must be a username or email address. It must absolutely not be a phone number or something else that intrinsically ties it to a specific device. What's App has failed that test since before Facebook bought it. In a world where we have multiple devices and move between them often, it has always been insane to me that other people don't think there's a problem with using a phone number as a unique identifier for an individual. And it only gets even worse when you start adding international travel, changing your phone number, etc. into the mix.

3

yeah wouldn't have to hear from my offshore contractors anymore...it'd be nice.

3

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The Day WhatsApp Goes Dark | Spyke