• mosiacmango@lemm.ee
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    20 days ago

    End to end is end to end. Its either “the devices sign the messages with keys that never leave the the device so no 3rd party can ever compromise them” or it’s not.

    Signal is a more trustworthy org, but google isn’t going to fuck around with this service to make money. They make their money off you by keeping you in the google ecosystem and data harvesting elsewhere.

      • mosiacmango@lemm.ee
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        20 days ago

        Thats a different tech. End to end is cut and dry how it works. If you do anything to data mine it, it’s not end to end anymore.

        Only the users involved in end to end can access the data in that chat. Everyone else sees encrypted data, i.e noise. If there are any backdoors or any methods to pull data out, you can’t bill it as end to end.

        • circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org
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          20 days ago

          You are suggesting that “end-to-end” is some kind of legally codified phrase. It just isn’t. If Google were to steal data from a system claiming to be end-to-end encrypted, no one would be surprised.

          I think your point is: if that were the case, the messages wouldn’t have been end-to-end encrypted, by definition. Which is fine. I’m saying we shouldn’t trust a giant corporation making money off of selling personal data that it actually is end-to-end encrypted.

          By the same token, don’t trust Microsoft when they say Windows is secure.

          • mosiacmango@lemm.ee
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            20 days ago

            Its a specific, technical phrase that means one thing only, and yes, googles RCS meets that standard:

            https://support.google.com/messages/answer/10262381?hl=en

            How end-to-end encryption works

            When you use the Google Messages app to send end-to-end encrypted messages, all chats, including their text and any files or media, are encrypted as the data travels between devices. Encryption converts data into scrambled text. The unreadable text can only be decoded with a secret key.

            The secret key is a number that’s:

            Created on your device and the device you message. It exists only on these two devices.

            Not shared with Google, anyone else, or other devices.

            Generated again for each message.

            Deleted from the sender’s device when the encrypted message is created, and deleted from the receiver’s device when the message is decrypted.

            Neither Google or other third parties can read end-to-end encrypted messages because they don’t have the key.

            They have more technical information here if you want to deep dive about the literal implementation.

            You shouldn’t trust any corporation, but needless FUD detracts from their actual issues.

            • circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org
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              20 days ago

              You are missing my point.

              I don’t deny the definition of E2EE. What I question is whether or not RCS does in fact meet the standard.

              You provided a link from Google itself as verification. That is… not useful.

              Has there been an independent audit on RCS? Why or why not?

              • mosiacmango@lemm.ee
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                20 days ago

                Not that I can find. Can you post Signals most recent independent audit?

                Many of these orgs don’t post public audits like this. Its not common, even for the open source players like Signal.

                What we do have is a megacorp stating its technical implementation extremely explicitly for a well defined security protocol, for a service meant to directly compete with iMessage. If they are violating that, it opens them up to huge legal liability and reputational harm. Neither of these is worth data mining this specific service.

            • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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              19 days ago

              Even if we assume they don’t have a backdoor (which is probably accurate), they can still exfiltrate any data they want through Google Play services after it’s decrypted.

              They’re an ad company, so they have a vested interest in doing that. So I don’t trust them. If they make it FOSS and not rely on Google Play services, I might trust them, but I’d probably use a fork instead.

        • micballin@lemmy.world
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          20 days ago

          They can just claim archived or deleted messages don’t qualify for end to end encryption in their privacy policy or something equally vague. If they invent their own program they can invent the loophole on how the data is processed

          • cheesemoo@lemmy.world
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            20 days ago

            Or the content is encrypted, but the metadata isn’t, so they can market to you based on who you talk to and what they buy, etc.

            • mosiacmango@lemm.ee
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              20 days ago

              This part is likely, but not what we are talking about. Who you know and how you interact with them is separate from the fact that the content of the messages is not decryptable by anyone but the participants, by design. There is no “quasi” end to end. Its an either/or situation.

              • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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                19 days ago

                It doesn’t matter if the content is encrypted in transit if Google can access the content in the app after decryption. That doesn’t violate E2EE, and they could easily exfiltrate the data though Google Play Services, which is a hard requirement.

                I don’t trust them until the app is FOSS, doesn’t rely on Google Play Services, and is independently verified to not send data or metadata to their servers. Until then, I won’t use it.

          • mosiacmango@lemm.ee
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            20 days ago

            The messages are signed by cryptographic keys on the users phones that never leave the device. They are not decryptable in any way by google or anyone else. Thats the very nature of E2EE.

            How end-to-end encryption works

            When you use the Google Messages app to send end-to-end encrypted messages, all chats, including their text and any files or media, are encrypted as the data travels between devices. Encryption converts data into scrambled text. The unreadable text can only be decoded with a secret key.

            The secret key is a number that’s:

            Created on your device and the device you message. It exists only on these two devices.

            Not shared with Google, anyone else, or other devices.

            Generated again for each message.

            Deleted from the sender’s device when the encrypted message is created, and deleted from the receiver’s device when the message is decrypted.

            Neither Google or other third parties can read end-to-end encrypted messages because they don’t have the key.

            They cant fuck with it, at all, by design. That’s the whole point. Even if they created “archived” messages to datamine, all they would have is the noise.

          • circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org
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            20 days ago

            Exactly. We know corporations regularly use marketing and doublespeak to avoid the fact that they operate for their interests and their interests alone. Again, the interests of corporations are not altruistic, regardless of the imahe they may want to support.

            Why should we trust them to “innovate” without independent audit?

        • ITGuyLevi@programming.dev
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          18 days ago

          End to end doesn’t say anything about where keys are stored, it can be end to end encrypted and someone else have access to the keys.

    • zergtoshi@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      Signal doesn’t harvest, use, sell meta data, Google may do that.
      E2E encryption doesn’t protect from that.
      Signal is orders of magnitude more trustworthy than Google in that regard.

      • renzev@lemmy.world
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        20 days ago

        There’s also Session, a fork of Signal which claims that their decentralised protocol makes it impossible/very difficult for them to harvest metadata, even if they wanted to.Tho I personally can’t vouch for how accurate their claims are.

      • mosiacmango@lemm.ee
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        19 days ago

        Agreed. That still doesnt mean google is not doing E2EE for its RCS service.

        Im not arguing Google is trustworthy or better than Signal. I’m arguing that E2EE has a specific meaning that most people in this thread do not appear to understand.

        • zergtoshi@lemmy.world
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          19 days ago

          Sure!
          I was merely trying to raise awareness for the need to bring privacy protection to a level beyond E2EE, although E2EE is a very important and useful step.

    • sem
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      20 days ago

      It could be end to end encrypted and safe on the network, but if Google is in charge of the device, what’s to say they’re not reading the message after it’s unencrypted? To be fair this would compromise signal or any other app on Android as well

      • mosiacmango@lemm.ee
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        20 days ago

        That’s a different threat model that verges on “most astonishing corporate espinoage in human history and greatest threat to corporate personhood” possible for Google. It would require thousands if not tens of thousands of Google employees coordinating in utter secrecy to commit an unheard of crime that would be punishable by death in many circumstances.

        If they have backdoored all android phones and are actively exploting them in nefarious ways not explained in their various TOS, then they are exposing themselves to ungodly amounts of legal and regulatory risks.

        I expect no board of directors wants a trillion dollars of company worth to evaporate overnight, and would likely not be okay backdooring literally billions of phones from just a fiduciary standpoint.

        • circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org
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          20 days ago

          It would require thousands if not tens of thousands of Google semployees coordinating in utter secrecy

          This is usually used for things like the Moon Landing, where so many folks worked for NASA to make it entirely impossible that the landing was faked.

          But it doesn’t really apply here. We know for example that NSA backdoors exist in Windows. Were those a concerted effort by MS employees? Does everyone working on the project have access to every part of the code?

          It just isn’t how development works at this scale.

          • Pips@lemmy.sdf.org
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            20 days ago

            Ok but no one is arguing Windows is encrypted. Google is specifically stating, in a way that could get them sued for shitloads of money, that their messaging protocol is E2EE. They have explicitly described how it is E2EE. Google can be a bad company while still doing this thing within the bounds we all understand. For example, just because the chat can’t be backdoored doesn’t mean the device can’t be.

    • 𝕽𝖚𝖆𝖎𝖉𝖍𝖗𝖎𝖌𝖍@midwest.social
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      19 days ago

      End to end could still - especially with a company like Google - include data collection on the device. They could even “end to end” encrypt sending it to Google in the side channel. If you want to be generous, they would perform the aggregation in-device and don’t track the content verbatim, but the point stands: e2e is no guarantee of privacy. You have to also trust that the app itself isn’t recording metrics, and I absolutely do not trust Google to not do this.

      They make so of their big money from profiling and ads. No way they’re not going to collect analytics. Heck, if you use the stock keyboard, that’s collecting analytics about the texts you’re typing into Signal, much less Google’s RCS.

    • MonkderVierte@lemmy.ml
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      19 days ago

      End to end matters, who has the key; you or the provider. And Google could still read your messages before they are encrypted.

      • mosiacmango@lemm.ee
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        19 days ago

        You have the key, not the provider. They are explicit about this in the implementation.

        They can only read the messages before encryption if they are backdooring all android phones in an act of global sabotage. Pretty high consequences for soke low stakes data.

        • ITGuyLevi@programming.dev
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          18 days ago

          I’m pretty sure the key is stored on the device, which is backed up to Google. I cannot say for sure if they do or don’t backup your keyring, but I feel better not using it.

      • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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        19 days ago

        Yup, they can read anything you can, and send whatever part they want through Google Play services. I don’t trust them, so I don’t use Messenger or Play services on my GrapheneOS device.

    • renzev@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      Of course our app is end-to-end encrypted! The ends being your device and our server, that is.

      • jagged_circle@feddit.nl
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        19 days ago

        That’s literally what zoom said early in the pandemic.

        Then all the business in the world gave them truck loads of money, the industry called them out on it, and they hired teams of cryptographers to build an actual e2ee system

    • CatLikeLemming
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      19 days ago

      Note that it doesn’t mean metadata is encrypted. They may not know what you sent, but they may very well know you message your mum twice a day and who your close friends are that you message often, that kinda stuff. There’s a good bit you can do with metadata about messages combined with the data they gather through other services.

    • jagged_circle@feddit.nl
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      19 days ago

      They do encrypt it and they likely dont send the messages unencrypted.

      Likely what’s happening is they’re extracting keywords to determine what you’re talking about (namely what products you might buy) on the device itself, and then uploading those categories (again, encrypted) up to their servers for storing and selling.

      This doesn’t invalidate their claim of e2ee and still lets them profit off of your data. If you want to avoid this, only install apps with open source clients.

      • mosiacmango@lemm.ee
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        19 days ago

        E2EE means a 3rd party cant extract anything in the messages at all, by definition.

        If they are doing the above, it’s not E2EE, and they are liable for massive legal damages.

        • jagged_circle@feddit.nl
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          19 days ago

          Thats not what it means. It means that a third party cannot decrypt it on their servers.

          Of course if the “third party” is actually decrypting it on your device, then they can read the messages. I dont know why this is not clear to you.