This is probably THE best application for private messaging I've seen thus far. Be sure to share this to preppers everywhere (or just people in general) to make sure more are aware that there are tools that can be used to move your Digital Preparedness forward. Stay safe and stay prepared out here guys!
Looks like a lot of potential! The thing is, EVERYONE should be entitle to privacy. As a therapist, I do my best to protect people's privacy... we have HIPPA laws for that. The right to privacy, as you said, need not be a controversial issue
Exactly, people are always like "if you don't have anything to hide then reveal all". Lol, no I have things I'd rather keep secret. If you want to be an open book, that's on you.
Un video muy interesante 👌. Ademas hay poca informacion respecto a esta app de mensajeria. Gracias por compartir esta informacion y por poner subtitulos en español sino no podria haberlo entendido!👏👏
Just a heads up, your volume is quote low. I can barely hear you over my fans which are supposed to be whisper quiet but a shade above that. Thanks for the video either way.
I use Telegram. Is Simple X better than that? Telegram is supposed to be end-to-end encryption. But there are some things you mentioned in the video that I’m not sure about. Both parties have to use Simple X to have secured messages.. right?
Telegram is only end to end encrypted for one on one chats and only if its toggled on for each chat with someone (off by default). Also telegram uses a different encryption algorithm than what most end to end encryptions chat apps use which also raises some concern.
@@TheDigitalPrepper it’s basically just your messages disappear I don’t think it offers much unless all you care about is privacy from someone going through your phone
They're just salty that Signal isn't truly a privacy-focused messenger. It's not entirely their fault though, especially when you have privacy-posers like @techlore, @surveillancereport, and @thenewoil misleading their viewers. I fail to see how requiring a phone number and notifying your contacts you signed up for Signal makes the app "privacy-focused" in the slightest.
@@tech-bore8839 In terms of anonymity it isn't on par but you are directly confusing privacy with it. Signal does very well on ones privacy and is on the top in terms of ease of use and overall stability.
@@w1z4rd9 I really don't see a difference between the two. Privacy or anonymity, you're protecting your actual identity either way. Signal requiring an important piece of personal info, aka a phone number, goes against the reason people are migrating to the app in the first place. If Signal required only an email, which is easy to create, I'd be a little less critical of the app itself. However, requiring a phone number is taking the easy/lazy way out rather than trying to find a unique solution.
@@w1z4rd9 Keep this in your mind. Without Anonymity there's no Privacy and if there's no Privacy then there's no Security. If a application requires you any personal information just to sign in/used their product then that application have no right to say their "Private" or their users have "Privacy".
This is probably THE best application for private messaging I've seen thus far. Be sure to share this to preppers everywhere (or just people in general) to make sure more are aware that there are tools that can be used to move your Digital Preparedness forward. Stay safe and stay prepared out here guys!
Thanks for video DP! 😎💋
Of course! Stay safe!
Looks like a lot of potential!
The thing is, EVERYONE should be entitle to privacy. As a therapist, I do my best to protect people's privacy... we have HIPPA laws for that. The right to privacy, as you said, need not be a controversial issue
Exactly, people are always like "if you don't have anything to hide then reveal all". Lol, no I have things I'd rather keep secret. If you want to be an open book, that's on you.
It's called "HIPAA".
I don't own a smart phone, or communicate through any social media except youtube, the only hacker I communicate with is Digital Prepper lol
✊good video. Thank you.
Thank you for watching! :D
Un video muy interesante 👌. Ademas hay poca informacion respecto a esta app de mensajeria. Gracias por compartir esta informacion y por poner subtitulos en español sino no podria haberlo entendido!👏👏
Just a heads up, your volume is quote low. I can barely hear you over my fans which are supposed to be whisper quiet but a shade above that. Thanks for the video either way.
Odd, seems to be all good on my TV xD. I'll keep an eye out, thanks!
It's very easy to hear. I don't even have my volume full and plenty loud with my android. I'm older so it isn't better hearing that helps for me
Not any of em talked about it but its really good
I use Telegram. Is Simple X better than that? Telegram is supposed to be end-to-end encryption. But there are some things you mentioned in the video that I’m not sure about. Both parties have to use Simple X to have secured messages.. right?
Telegram is only end to end encrypted for one on one chats and only if its toggled on for each chat with someone (off by default). Also telegram uses a different encryption algorithm than what most end to end encryptions chat apps use which also raises some concern.
Basically, what @LikeAwnestly said. I've used Telegram as well but have since made the swap.
Thank you both for that insight! 💋😎
only secret chats are encrypted in telegram
This will leave Dust in the…dust.
Is Dust another Private Messaging app?
@@TheDigitalPrepper it’s basically just your messages disappear I don’t think it offers much unless all you care about is privacy from someone going through your phone
So many salty Signal fanboys on reddit bashing this. They just don't know
Lol 😂
They're just salty that Signal isn't truly a privacy-focused messenger. It's not entirely their fault though, especially when you have privacy-posers like @techlore, @surveillancereport, and @thenewoil misleading their viewers. I fail to see how requiring a phone number and notifying your contacts you signed up for Signal makes the app "privacy-focused" in the slightest.
@@tech-bore8839 In terms of anonymity it isn't on par but you are directly confusing privacy with it. Signal does very well on ones privacy and is on the top in terms of ease of use and overall stability.
@@w1z4rd9 I really don't see a difference between the two. Privacy or anonymity, you're protecting your actual identity either way. Signal requiring an important piece of personal info, aka a phone number, goes against the reason people are migrating to the app in the first place.
If Signal required only an email, which is easy to create, I'd be a little less critical of the app itself. However, requiring a phone number is taking the easy/lazy way out rather than trying to find a unique solution.
@@w1z4rd9 Keep this in your mind. Without Anonymity there's no Privacy and if there's no Privacy then there's no Security. If a application requires you any personal information just to sign in/used their product then that application have no right to say their "Private" or their users have "Privacy".