| I'm a big fan of TextSecure and recommended it to all my friends, both those in IT and 'normal' people. Usually, I managed to convince them that the open source nature of TextSecure and the crypto experts behind it (e.g. Moxie) make it more secure than Threema/... . However, the more sceptical ones among my friends always asked two questions, which I didn't have a good answer for: 1. What is TextSecure's business model? Who pays for the server infrastructure? 2. Doesn't WhisperSystems belong to Twitter? Twitter is a US-company (and also part of the NSA stuff), so why should I use that kind of software? [Edit for clarification: I'm from Germany, where the US/Twitter affiliation is seen as a downside by some people]. It would be great if TextSecure/Open Whispersystems publicly addressed these points. I have seen that there's a reply from Moxie here: http://support.whispersystems.org/customer/portal/questions/... but these two questions are so central that they deserve more attention than a reply in the support forum. From a technological point of view, TextSecure wins hands down. Now it's time to convince those who are still skeptical because of other reasons. Just to be clear: I want TextSecure to become successful. I'm a big fan. That's why I'm mentioning this: in order to help spread the word. |
It's a good question. TextSecure is not a business, so we don't really have a business model in the traditional sense. Open Whisper Systems is a collective project made up of volunteers and a growing number of contributors, who are sometimes paid by donations (https://whispersystems.org/blog/bithub/) and grants.
Thus far, we've been able to smoothly fund the server infrastructure through grants and donations as well. I think we'll probably be able to continue that way indefinitely, but if that ever changed for any reason, we would consider charging small amounts for premium or high cost features like extremely large attachments. But in general, Open Whisper Systems is a project rather than a company, and the project's objective is not financial profit. I know that's a difficult thing to explain.
> 2. Doesn't WhisperSystems belong to Twitter? Twitter is a US-company (and also part of the NSA stuff), so why should I use that kind of software?
This is also confusing, but Open Whisper Systems is not Whisper Systems. Open Whisper Systems has no relationship with Twitter at all, and is a different organization that came together to facilitate development of the Whisper Systems software which was released under GPLv3. Twitter has never contributed money or resources to Open Whisper Systems, and is not in control of any of the infrastructure.