telegram:
- very good android, ios, and desktop open-source apps they keep properly up to date (also a web client)
- stickers, emojos, gifs (and with better compression)
- useful bots (and inline bots)
- groups and good admin tools
- nicely including voice or video in chats
- now even favorites
- requires a phone number (not public)
- is not very secure (but above average)
- is centralized and not entirely open (they haven't been evil for now)
@CobaltVelvet Have you looked into Wire at all? Not sure how it compares to Telegram.
And if course, either way: https://www.xkcd.com/538/
@CobaltVelvet I forget what scared me away from Telegram, but just started playing with Wire to replace Skype.
Let me see my daughter on a business trip and no mysterious clicks in the background!
@thomnottom exactly the xkcd i was thinking about writing this <3
@thomnottom @CobaltVelvet I liked Wire until i heard they were using Signal's protocol, and after their vocal defense for Whatsapp and the backdoor they implemented I trust nothing they do.
@CobaltVelvet @thomnottom (When i say i trust nothing they do, i'm referring to Signal. Wire seems like their hearts are in the right place, but I don't trust them currently with while they're using Signal's tech)
@Takanu @CobaltVelvet I'm firmly in the camp of bad UX decision does not equal "backdoor".
I also don't trust FB, which is why I wouldn't use Whatsapp. But that has no affect on Signal for me.
@thomnottom @CobaltVelvet It's not a bad UX decision though, Whatsapp literally has a backdoor...
@thomnottom I haven't, but all i read about it looks good and i may use it in the future