Signal's CEO: Then We're Leaving Sweden | Sweden Herald
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There are a few people in my social bubble that are not technical at all, but heard a few bad things about WhatsApp and that's why they are using Signal. Nothing more, they do not know how it works, they do not know who provides it.
thats not the target audience, thankfully.
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thats not the target audience, thankfully.
The target audience is everybody with a Smartphone.
The majority of people in my signal contacts are there because someone (sometimes me) pushed them to use it instead of WhatsApp.
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"Leaving a country" for digital services usually means not providing services there anymore.
Thanks, this makes a lot more sense.
... i keep, time and again, searching for things, only to discover my "search goal" is not based in reality. -
No. Thats not what the law does. Sweden doesn't do censorship.
The question was what Signal would do though ...
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That is because they just decided to switch to use it for internal communications. This means that they would have to roll back that decision.
It would have been good of the article to mention that important tidbit...
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The question was what Signal would do though ...
Leave Sweden so they dont have to follow these regulations.
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There are a few people in my social bubble that are not technical at all, but heard a few bad things about WhatsApp and that's why they are using Signal. Nothing more, they do not know how it works, they do not know who provides it.
And now they'll hear something bad about Signal and move on as they did with WhatsApp, as per your example.
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It would have been good of the article to mention that important tidbit...
It happened like 2 weeks ago so I will forgive them for missing it.
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- According to Whittaker, the bill requires the encrypted messaging app Signal to install so-called backdoors in the software.
It’s worth noting that mullvad is based in Sweden
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- According to Whittaker, the bill requires the encrypted messaging app Signal to install so-called backdoors in the software.
I don't get how its supposed to work...they want to require messengers to include backdoors in their software? So when a program is FOSS, then you can literally just use it knowing there is no backdoor..also, what blocks you from using a server in different country? Wtf that even means...
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It’s worth noting that mullvad is based in Sweden
No wonder they pussied out and removed port forwarding
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Proton is swiss
Uuh... Ok? How is that relevant?
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Proton is swiss
And gobbles Trump's knob publicly.
They won't need a law to force compliance.
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It’s worth noting that mullvad is based in Sweden
Mullvad has proven time and time again that they don't log anything at all. Even if they give backdoor access, there's nothing to record.
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Uuh... Ok? How is that relevant?
Directly.
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And gobbles Trump's knob publicly.
They won't need a law to force compliance.
Sci-fi writing in here I see
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- According to Whittaker, the bill requires the encrypted messaging app Signal to install so-called backdoors in the software.
There needs to be a messaging app which provides a backdoor for every government that requests it. Every time some dumbfuck legislator asks for a super-giga-secure-backdoor they promise not to misuse, they should be directed to that app.
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- According to Whittaker, the bill requires the encrypted messaging app Signal to install so-called backdoors in the software.
I'm not familiar with EU law, but wouldn't this set a precidence across the whole EU?
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Mullvad has proven time and time again that they don't log anything at all. Even if they give backdoor access, there's nothing to record.
Literally the first sentence of the article: "The government wants Signal and Whatsapp to be forced to store messages sent using the apps."
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I'm a bit surprised that the armed forces are openly opposing this, but good for them!
Don't know if it's a trustworthy source, but:
https://cornucopia.se/2025/02/forsvarsmakten-infor-krav-pa-signal-for-samtal-och-meddelanden/