Reminder: never trust an app that calls its encryption "end to end"
It's either made by competent people who want to entrap you, or people who aren't competent enough to make a decently secure app anyway
Reminder: never trust an app that calls its encryption "end to end"
It's either made by competent people who want to entrap you, or people who aren't competent enough to make a decently secure app anyway
nostr:nprofile1qqs0wgf8etnayvkcs4c636fdvepy73jc9q2xlcln64srjdm5e98p8ncpzfmhxue69uhkyet5vyhrzd3kxyhxjmcprdmhxue69uhhvetjvf5hy6trdpsjumn0wd68yvfwvdhk6vj0j52 explain to me like Iām 10
To be clear: an app can make it possible to do end-to-end encryption, so if it does, it's not a lie for them to say their app makes it possible
But an app can't make its own encryption end-to-end, so if they say their app "does" end-to-end encryption, or just "has" it, that's a lie
It being an app implies it's something can be transferred as a simple file between different users and run on their different systems, not something that can do encryption on its own in 2 places and thus ensure it's end-to-end