this post was submitted on 27 Jan 2026
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People not understanding how security threats actually work is why everything is so broken these days.
If you do it by hand sure.
If you put the message into an app then the app is trusted to not leak the message. What is described in the article is that Whatsapp can instruct clients to send a copies of the message from the app to their server.
There is nothing stopping any messaging app doing this, having decentralized servers and 3rd party clients wouldn't stop this but it would make it much easier to protect yourself from the attack.
I’m not following. In the WhatsApp case, yes, because we can’t see how those keys are managed. In the Signal case, we can. So the centralized server has zero impact on the privacy of the message. If we trust the keys are possessed only by the generating device, then how does the encrypted message become compromised?
I’m not talking about anonymity, only message privacy. No different than any of the other proxies or routers along the way. If they don’t have the key, the message is not readable.
Now I'm curious: how does the person you're messaging get the same key to decrypt the message you send?
I'm genuinely curious.