Apple is an anti privacy company, but these nutrition label things are nice for marketing. Worth a look.
pretty cool! are these labels in the app store alongside the apps before you download?
where matrix tho?
These labels are from iOS app store, and Element/Matrix is not on Apple store I think.
Matrix was not in the pictogram. And I cleansed the Chinese national flag below the WeChat app that the original xenophobic Reddit author put into it, to have some academic neutrality.
element is on the app store, i have an ios device and use it everyday, just haven’t yet updated to ios 14
Oops my bad. iOS 14 glows I hear. But I guess Apple itself glows.
Nothing on you though if you need Apple for FaceTime or iMessage, those are legitimate needs.
glows
wdym?
Nothing on you though if you need Apple for FaceTime or iMessage, those are legitimate needs.
nah, literally never used these once, pretty unpopular here, it’s just a phone that i got 5 years ago and that works still perfectly fine, but i’ve heard that apparently people in the us miss out on things because they are not included in imessage chats because they have an android phone, which is perhaps the most bizarre form of discrimination i’ve heard of lol
“Glowie” or “glow in the dark” is a non-political meme term used in 4chan and other chans for digital spying agencies (three letter and the like). Same goes for terms like “botnet”. Sort of treating them like radiation that must be kept away. Maybe the term got its birth from radium in clocks that allows to see things in dark.
It was a reference to how Apple is a part of NSA and PRISM program. So to shorten all this, “glowie” term is used.
USA megacorps create discrimination against privacy in general via many ways we know, and Apple does against any non-Apple (99% Android) users by changing contrast of coloured bubbles for chat messages. USA people are lazy to change from “Messages” iMessage app, so they live in their own bubble.
I don’t think it’s very fair to leave Threema out of the discussion, now that they’re open-source.
Threema has incomparably small userbase, so is not considered even in privacy community.
I imagine that is slowly changing now since they’ve made that announcement. The only thing that was holding most people back from at least giving it a shot was the fact that it wasn’t open-source. I personally think it should be included at this point because it is privacy-focused alternative to WhatsApp.
I agree, thanks for pointing it out. Threema was in my hindsight, never in focus, but this changes things.
Although, I use XMPP and Matrix daily, so it is one of the most little mistakes I made in not considering each and every app in the discussion. I will apologise to myself for that.