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by pdimitar 1984 days ago
I suppose I missed his sarcasm then. Happens pretty easily over text.

As said in another comment, I am no cryptography expert. I simply argue against the very visible negative bias against Telegram which is accentuated even more by very childish snarks on almost any Telegram HN thread. That gets to me and it's not how HN should be.

I never argued that my opinion is a fact. I said how I arrived at my opinion and debate with people whether that's plausible or not [based on limited info]. The rest can be proven/rebuked by specialists.

1 comments

Have you considered that perhaps Telegram deserves that negative bias due to their own behavior?
I would consider it... if I ever see any other criticism in HN besides "they don't have massively peer- and pro-reviewed encryption" and very childish snark with zero facts interspersed.

What's this "Telegram behaviour"? Seriously, enlighten me -- this is not a snark. I've been following HN Telegram threads for a long time and I've only seen the two things I mentioned above.

It's really puzzling, especially in a world where a ton of very public and everyday software has much more flaws than Telegram. The whole very directed and non-HN-esque hate towards it does stands out.

Telegram positions itself as a secure messenger but does not encrypt most conversations, that's simply dishonest on their part. Until they start to clearly communicate to their users that "Hey! This conversation is not encrypted" they deserve nothing but negativity.

Multiple official Telegram clients do not even support the "secret chats".

Right from their own website https://telegram.org/

>Private

>Telegram messages are heavily encrypted and can self-destruct.

This is a lie.

>Secure

>Telegram keeps your messages safe from hacker attacks.

This is a lie, you can even pull someones telegram message history by sim swapping them FFS.

As far as being able to put a timer on a message and see it disappear for both sides, how do you know that the "self-destructing" messages claim is a lie? Genuinely curious, I am likely missing something.

> This is a lie, you can even pull someones telegram message history by sim swapping them FFS.

Well, the mobile telecoms still have no solution for SIM swapping and most software uses SIMs as a way to uniquely identify users. I've heard of -- and used -- messengers like Signal and Matrix and the added inconvenience for not using a SIM is definitely off-putting even for me as a techie. So I can't blame Telegram or any other app for using SIM identification -- it's flawed, that's well-known in the tech community, but I suppose somebody made the call to risk this because they wanted adoption and didn't want to make onboarding too hard?

---

I can agree on a generally somewhat misleading marketing being a reason for negativity. Even a functioning backdoor might still mean that messages are safe from most hacker attacks though; the backdoor is only used on demand (it's infeasible to use it all the time, that would take too much server resources and would put the onus on the eavesdroppers to provide extra infrastructure I think?) and the unencrypted data is served to whoever asked for it behind closed doors. That does not mean that any hacker can get their hands on it though, right?

But even a somewhat misleading marketing can't explain the violent reaction of most of HN when Telegram is mentioned -- at least it can't explain it to me. There's so much popular and very shady software out there and somehow Telegram eats all the flak while many other software packages receive very generous benefits of the doubt.