cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/36863320

Comments

Viber, WeTalk, TikTok, Nimbuzz, and Poppo Live are already registered.

Similarly, Telegram and Global Diary are in the process of registration.

Social media platforms to be blocked:

  1. Facebook
  2. Facebook Messenger
  3. Instagram
  4. YouTube
  5. WhatsApp
  6. X (formerly Twitter)
  7. LinkedIn
  8. Snapchat
  9. Reddit
  10. Discord
  11. Pinterest
  12. Signal
  13. Threads
  14. WeChat
  15. Quora
  16. Tumblr
  17. Clubhouse
  18. Mastodon
  19. Rumble
  20. MeWe
  21. VK
  22. Line
  23. IMO
  24. Zalo
  25. Soul
  26. Hamro Patro
Other Sources
      • solrize@lemmy.ml
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        1 day ago

        I guess that centralized server thing is working out real well then. /s

            • Holytimes@sh.itjust.works
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              21 hours ago

              If it’s federated it’s easy to block. If it’s not it’s too small to care about really.

              And if you just remove the ability for federation to function in your country you have fundamentally broken the system making it basically unusable for your people.

              The federvise is extremely weak to censorship for your avg joe because it’s strongest point the federation system is also it’s biggest Achilles heel.

              With out federation it’s just a series of less useful forums and blogs.

              The system is designed to prevent corporate ownership from destroying it. But the idea that you can prevent a government and those in control of the infrastructure from blocking it? Is laughable.

              You can in small ways wrong around it but you don’t need 100% censorship to win the game of cat and mouse. Even 50% of the biggest instances wins you the game.

      • solrize@lemmy.ml
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        1 day ago

        Bah, more reason to avoid Signal. For private communications I want an antisocial network, not the opposite.

        • Zak@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          I think it’s a silly feature for a messaging app, but it has no impact on me if I ignore the feature.

          • solrize@lemmy.ml
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            1 day ago

            It does say something about the mindset of the vendor, which is a legit reason to decide not to use an app. From what I can tell, Teslas are pretty good cars despite some issues here and there. But Elon’s antics are enough to make me decide not to buy one.

            • Zak@lemmy.world
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              1 day ago

              I’m not sure adding a questionable social feature to a messaging app is reasonably comparable to the very long list of insane and/or evil shit Musk has done.

              Like any messaging system, Signal’s utility is proportional to its userbase. If stories get more people to use it without making it worse for people who don’t care, then they’re a good idea even if I think everything else about the concept is bad.

              • solrize@lemmy.ml
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                21 hours ago

                A bar (place where you drink) is another type of a messaging system. You can meet people in them and have conversations there. That doesn’t mean it’s best to crowd everyone into one giant bar claiming that increases utility, compared with letting people freely open their own bars. Especially if the avowed purpose of the bar is enabling private conversations (giving you and your friend Bob a private place to talk, as opposed to creating a meeting place for strangers).

                I can understand visiting a giant bar if I want to mingle with randos in public. If I want to talk privately with my friend, I want a small, private bar, preferably one whose existence is not known to anyone outside of my friend group. If the giant bar operator is going out of his way to prevent me from doing that, I have to say he is up to something not so good.

                Sorry about the strained analogy but at least it didn’t mention cars. Well, until just now.

                • Zak@lemmy.world
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                  1 day ago

                  The analogy between a private messaging service and a bar is not just strained; it’s nonsensical.

                  It might work for a chat system that’s mainly public and discoverable like Matrix, IRC, or Discord. A community having too many people, or any people who don’t follow certain norms can make it unpleasant. As long as it keeps out spammers, Signal having people I don’t want to talk to on it won’t affect me at all; I just won’t give those people my phone number or username.

                • The_Decryptor@aussie.zone
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                  1 day ago

                  You can turn the feature off entirely, or just not talk to people who post them? It’s not something like tiktok where you get pushed a bunch of random videos, it’s stuff that people you know are sending you.

            • egrets@lemmy.world
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              1 day ago

              Use whatever software you want, more power to you, but I’m not totally convinced that “chaired by a fascist transphobic multibillionaire oligarch who actively subverts democracy at every opportunity” and “introduced a feature I don’t want to use into my free secure messaging app” are even close to equivocal?

              • solrize@lemmy.ml
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                1 day ago

                I’m bothered mostly by the default Signal app’s inability to use a self-hosted server instead of signal.com’s own server. I’ve been skeptical towards Signal because of that. The social media feature is something I hadn’t heard of til just now. It reinforces my skepticism but it’s just another issue. Both tell me that Signal is out to somehow monetize (and maybe spy on) other people’s private relationships in a captive userbase, sort of like, you know, Marc Zuckerberg. I’d prefer to avoid dealing with people like that, especially where privacy apps are concerned.

                I’d be more interested in Signal if I could use my own server without having to get people to install modified clients.

                • Zak@lemmy.world
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                  1 day ago

                  I’m bothered mostly by the default Signal app’s inability to use a self-hosted server instead of signal.com’s own server.

                  I don’t like the centralized nature of it either, but until someone makes a decentralized option that’s polished and reliable enough that nobody will be mad at me after I talk them into using it, Signal will be my go-to for messaging.

                  Ideologically, I’d like it to be Matrix. I use Matrix on occasion, at least when Element web isn’t taking up 10% of my laptop’s RAM, ElementX isn’t crashing on load, and whatever native desktop client I tried last is actually performing key exchange so I can read my private messages. I would not try to talk someone into trying Matrix right now unless they were ideologically motivated or interested in the technology.

                  • solrize@lemmy.ml
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                    1 day ago

                    until someone makes a decentralized option that’s polished and reliable enough that nobody will be mad at me after I talk them into using it, Signal will be my go-to for messaging.

                    In fact that option already exists, it’s Signal itself, except that they deliberately made it harder to use that way. The client and server code are (from what I understand) both downloadable. So you can run your own server, modify the client to connect to your server instead of to Signal’s, compile the new client, and get your friends to use your new .apk instead of using the one from the Play store. Of course Signal could perfectly well have just made the server address a user configuration field in the first place, like Nextcloud does.

                    So why didn’t they? The existence of the social media feature tells something about their intentions. The fact that you can decide not to use that feature is irrelevant to what it tells. The idea is a many-to-many system with N users has N2 possible connections, which increases the site engagement and stickiness. That is, they are in the eyeball monetization business or are gearing up to enter it. So that’s at best a warning sign.

                    I have to say I don’t use Signal so I don’t understand what is supposed to be great about it. I have a self-hosted Nextcloud (including Chat) and it was a hassle to install, but hasn’t needed much attention since then. You can use either the Nextcloud app from F-droid or you can use an ordinary browser to chat over it, no app needed. That also means you can use a normal desktop computer instead of a phone. It does voice and video too, though those aren’t so great.

                    Jitsi Meet is supposed to also be ok for self-hosting though I haven’t tried doing that. I did play with their web client over their public instance (meet.jit.si) and that was quite nice.

                    GNU Jami unfortunately goes too far and tries to be serverless, and hits a bunch of reliability snags because of that. I tried to use it but just had too little success. I don’t know if it’s fixable without abandoning the underlying architecture. And, it needs an app. I think it’s preferable to support browser clients even if a mobiie app is also available.

                    I haven’t tried Matrix. I’m enough of a luddite to still use IRC but it has shortcomings for how people use chat these days. I don’t know the web client picture for IRC or Matrix. I can say that Nextcloud Chat isn’t that much different from Slack, from a non-technical user’s perspective, if the user isn’t trying to run a server. You just get a server URL and click on it in a browser. No app, unlike Signal as far as I know, so if anything it’s simpler.

        • redjard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 day ago

          It’s completely removable with one setting. No nags or anti-patterns or design holes.
          If it stops a few from sticking with whatsapp because signal lacks that “feature”, I’d say it’s worth it.

    • Ulrich@feddit.org
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      1 day ago

      Depends on how you want to look at it. They have “stories” which could most certainly be considered that.