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It has its downsides as well. Though better than WhatsApp and telegram obviously
https://www.freie-messenger.de/en/warumnicht/signal/
I have to say that some of the points on that site are outright ridiculous.
First off, they quote the privacy officer of the German protestant church, who has no technical background according to his own bio:
Not sure what that's supposed to mean, because the GDPR applies based on user location and not company location. Although I'm going to grant that having servers in US jurisdictions may be a concern.
And he goes on to say that Threema (for profit, proprietary server code and (at the time) client code) and SIMSme (for profit, fully proprietary) are preferable over Signal because of the jurisdictions they're in. Not sure about anyone else, but I'm going to trust the open source software more, regardless of what jurisdiction the servers are in.
I do have to give him credit for recognising a "self-hosted messenger service based on established and freely available protocols on federated servers" as the best option, though.
Fair, but how many other messaging services publish server code at all?
I suspect there's very little overlap in the Venn diagram of people who use (or even know of) Signal and people who don't speak English.
This boils down to users trusting Signal as a certificate authority and not verifying their contacts "security number". Fair point, but a user can still choose to use Signal in a way that removes those weaknesses.
Of course, since we're on a federated service, I expect people to jump on the chance to recommend Matrix/XMPP instead, but realistically, I've had much more success getting people to use Signal. And apart from federated messengers, I'm not aware of anything better than Signal.
I've been using Signal for what seems like years now.
I've got 4 contacts (5 if you include a martial arts school I no longer attend), and only char with 2 of them regularly: my brother and sister.
I've downloaded and installed Briar, Session, and Simplex, and keep meaning to test them out with the help of my wife ('s phone) to see what they're like.