Now Signal announced they’re stopping SMS support for Android, what are your alternatives?

    • 𝕽𝖚𝖆𝖎𝖉𝖍𝖗𝖎𝖌𝖍
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      2 years ago

      SMS works where internet does not.

      There are many places where the data connection is either not available, or hideouly unreliable. In many rural areas, especially in poorer countries but also in wealthy ones, you can still have cell signal but no data, and SMS still works without data.

      Let them eat cake.

      • Slatlun@lemmy.ml
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        2 years ago

        Very real. I work in remote places where I have to find high ground, stand on my truck, and hold my phone as high as possible just to get SMS in/out. There is no reason to expect there will ever be anymore towers up there, so data or even calls are a no go.

      • @fosstodon.org
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        2 years ago

        @sxan @poVoq SMS was intergrated to Signal initially, as people used it prior to Signal being developed. People wanted an all in one app but as we see now, they would like to keep their mission on the right track of staying a secure and privacy driven service. It is understandable they are taking this direction forward. Some users just need SMS especially to communicate to those who still have not adopted particular practices and/or have aqcuired the services to do so.

      • Dum@reddthat.com
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        1 year ago

        Not at all my experience, the miniscule amount of data needed for a text message goes over the shittiest of internet lines. Yes, SMS sometimes goes over a highly saturated network where data doesn’t because sms just yeets your data instead of establishing a proper connection with a handshake. Though that’s usually very unreliable as well. SMS is also terrible from a privacy perspective, as it is unencrypted and can be spoofed and read by anyone in between, and even read by third parties who just listen in on the wireless transmission. Look where you’re posting. “Cake” pfft