Pull out your smartphone and sexeist eroticismscroll through your list of recently downloaded apps. What do you see — Snapchat, HQ Trivia, or maybe some random face-filtering nonsense? Is Signal in there? If not, you've messed up in a major way.
Despite all the cool games, video editing tools, and shopping-assistant applications released this year, the secure messaging app Signal is the only one that really mattered over the course of 2017. And it wasn't even released this year.
SEE ALSO: Senate staffers can now use Signal, apparentlyFor the uninitiated, Signal is a free and secure messaging application that allows for encrypted texts, phone calls, and video chats between users. That's basically it. Sure, it has a ton of neat features (like disappearing messages), but a big part of what makes it so important is just how simple it is.
If you can use iMessage, you can use Signal. If you can figure out how to send a text message, you can figure out Signal.
And that's the way it should be. With Signal, the private way to communicate is also the easy and free one. No more mucking about with PGP, and no more wondering just who, exactly, is reading your messages.
"There are no ads, no affiliate marketers, no creepy tracking," Whisper Systems explains on its website. "Just open technology for a fast, simple, and secure messaging experience."
This matters. As we put more and more of our lives online, each and every bit of data we willingly submit (and some we don't) is harvested by massive corporations in order to better both track and predict our behavior and target us with advertisements. This is, to say the least, problematic.
By allowing you to have truly private conversations, Signal changes that equation. Why is this so important? This year, perhaps more than ever, we've seen just how asleep at the wheel tech giants are when it comes to nefarious actors using their platforms to sow discord and incite violence. Taking your conversations, and, by extension, valuable data about your so-called social graph off those platforms is one way to fight this.
But that's not all. This year also brought the Trump administration's stated intention to hunt down whistleblowers. Signal makes that job more difficult. Feel like leaking the shady machinations of some corrupt official? Signal can help you do this.
And if the government does come after your communications, Whisper Systems won't have much information to give them. According to the organization, in 2016 it "received a subpoena from the Eastern District of Virginia" requiring it to hand over data on two users. The only information it could "produce in response to a request like this is the date and time a user registered with Signal and the last date of a user’s connectivity to the Signal service."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
That's it. No record of who you're messaging with, how frequently you texted, or even ifyou messaged a specific person. Signal doesn't have the information to hand over.
The app gives you the power of private communication, for free, and asks nothing in return. That is an extremely rare bargain these days, and one that should not be overlooked. Still, there is one potential drawback — the person you want to securely talk with has to also have Signal. However, that shouldn't be too much of an issue.
If you feel like leaking sensitive information, most journalists already have it. Want to chat with someone in your life? Simply ask your friends and family to download it — possibly when you see them over the holidays. They've probably tried out a bunch of random apps over the course of the year, so what's one more that they'll actually use?
And, in one fell swoop, you will have helped to protect both your own privacy and that of your loved ones. That's a pretty great deal, and one we should all be seriously considering as we turn the page on this dreadful year in preparation for whatever is to come.
The app is available on both Android and iOS, and even has a desktop version. You should use it.
Topics Android Apps & Software Cybersecurity iOS Privacy Donald Trump
X to integrate sports gambling stats from BetMGMBedbugs by Sophie KempLove Songs: “Mississippi” by Sophie HaigneyCamus’s New York Diary, 1946 by Albert CamusBluetooth sex toys and VR: how people are having sex in virtual realityThe Couch Had Nothing to Do with Me by Maya BinyamMorrison’s Infinity Knots: Sites of Memory at Princeton by Adrienne RapheliOS 17.4 code may have accidentally revealed new iPad Pro camera featureNew species of gibbon named after Star Wars character, and Twitter can't copeLove Songs: “Water Sign” by Addie E. CitchensX to integrate sports gambling stats from BetMGMWordle today: The answer and hints for January 28Cooking with Florine Stettheimer by Valerie StiversThe Review Wins the National Magazine Award for Fiction by The Paris ReviewOrdinary Notes by Christina SharpeNew species of gibbon named after Star Wars character, and Twitter can't copeSpaceX's Saturday rocket launch is a big freaking dealOil!: On the PetroA Hall of Mirrors by Gary IndianaBedbugs by Sophie Kemp What’s Better Than the War & Peace Miniseries? The Strange, Working Romance of Fritz Lang and Thea von Harbou Things People Do: Four Paintings by Mernet Larsen AirPods Pro Prime Day deal: 2nd Gen at lowest price Best Prime Day Kindle deal: $50 off Kindle Paperwhite Signature Edition SpaceX's Starlink internet is now available in 32 countries Dolly Parton is starring in a Taco Bell musical on TikTok LeBron James, the Big Three, and Basketball Revolution The 10 best and funniest tweets of the week, including iPods and Nick Lachey Having Trouble Sleeping? Read This. Six Sweet Hours of Arabian Nights, and Other News by Dan Piepenbring On the Merits of Disturbing Literature The History Behind Agatha Christie’s “And Then There Were None” What If Technology Actually Helped Writers? Prime Day 2023 luggage deals: Shop from top brands like Samsonite and SwissGear The Invention of the Word “Serendipity” Elon Musk created a safety mess on X. CEO Linda Yaccarino is using it to cancel appearances. TikTok finally rolls out a creator crediting tool The 'this was my Multiverse of Madness' trend, explained Best Prime Day robot vacuum deal: 45% off Roborock S7
2.153s , 8286.1328125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【sexeist eroticism】,Openness Information Network