I’m looking for something to share images and videos between small family group. We use mix of android and apple. Text messages are terrible for images and videos.

We were using telegram, now I want to see what lemmy has to offer. Thank you in advance.

    • @Crazyslinkz@lemmy.worldOP
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      110 months ago

      Not looking for discord type feel. Looking for easy set up and communicating with older people and able to share videos and images.

  • HEXN3T
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    1210 months ago

    Everyone is saying Signal, but my family uses a Matrix space (mix of phones and PCs in this case) and it works great. It’s FOSS, federated. Truly future-proof.

    • @bastion@feddit.nl
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      10 months ago

      Yeah. Signal is the most polished, but Matrix is the most future-proof.

      And that’s not to say that matrix lacks polish, Signal is just excellent in this regard.

      • @bradboimler@lemmy.world
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        210 months ago

        At this point I feel the Matrix clients I’ve been keeping on eye on are more polished than Signal. None of my contacts are on Matrix though.

        • @bastion@feddit.nl
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          210 months ago

          Yeah? Which ones specifically? I like to keep tabs on Matrix - it’s really the most open of the secure systems, and if it’s clean enough to recommend, all the better.

  • fisco™🇬🇧🇺🇦
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    610 months ago

    I’ve been using Delta Chat for the last few weeks, its very similar to WhatsApp, but decentralised… Works very well, available on android & ios, definitely worth a look, as it could be good for your use case…

    https://delta.chat/en/

        • @ace_garp@lemmy.world
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          310 months ago

          No phone number required for DeltaChat.

          It packetises and encrypts chats, using email(SMTP) as the transport medium. Can send downsampled pics, videos or Push-to-talk audio. Can send full quality pics, videos, or attachments too.

          It’s on F-Droid, and you can use a seperate free email address(100MB limit) for the SMTP backend (from https://nine.testrun.org/ ), or use your own existing email address.

          Elegant and robust.

  • @SnotBubble@lemmy.ml
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    610 months ago

    I’d recommend Threema. It’s privacy focused, based in Switzerland. You don’t even need a phone number to create an account, they collect no data on you (claimed, but haven’t checked) and the code is open source, under A-GPL 3 license.

    There’s a build for Apple and Android, for which you pay once.

    I use this to talk with important family members.

  • @als@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    Akan
    610 months ago

    Signal is a nice suggestion but is based in the US meaning they could be subpoenaed and legally not allowed to say. It’s unlikely you’d be targeted though, unless you’re a very high-profile person. If you’re concerned about where servers are being run and who by then matrix is a great alternative.

  • @MC_Lovecraft@lemm.ee
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    310 months ago

    Signal was developed with financial backing by the CIA, so do with that information what you will. I use Teleguard which is very similar to Telegram but run out of Switzerland, and with 2-way encryption automatically enabled, unlike signal or telegram.

    • @salarua@sopuli.xyz
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      710 months ago

      Signal was developed with financial backing by the CIA, so do with that information what you will.

      source?

      • @MC_Lovecraft@lemm.ee
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        510 months ago

        https://www.opentech.fund/news/february-2018-monthly-report/

        It’s not a secret. It’s on their website. Note: the Open Technology Fund is the CIA. Just like Radio Free Asia (or Radio Free X, they’re all CIA-run appendages of the US state department) which the fund grew out of. The US government very often funds technologies and startups that have the potential surveillance applications (among other things) and Signal was one of them. The people calling this a conspiracy theory have no idea what they are talking about, but that’s not uncommon when it comes to Americans and swallowing their own propaganda whole.

        • @salarua@sopuli.xyz
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          210 months ago

          I looked up the Open Technology Fund on Wikipedia and it has no relation to the CIA. well, except that its parent agency (Radio Free Asia) is part of the US government like the CIA is. they don’t seem to work together at all, and they’re under the purview of two different branches of government

          besides, as other commenters have said, they’re open source and they’ve been audited. anyone can build the client themselves (with any potential backdoors removed) and set up their own server. would the CIA allow for that?

          • @Urist@lemmy.ml
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            10 months ago

            Realistically, how many people build applications themselves? Signal does not have reproducible builds (on Android at least) and depends on Play Services for notifications.

            EDIT: Seems they have it now (since 2016). I am getting old.

      • john
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        410 months ago

        His ass. This is a conspiracy theory that’s been going around for ages with dubious sources at best.

    • @BananaTrifleViolin@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Not heard that one before about the cia but let’s say for a moment that is true - Signal is open source so anyone can audit and work with the source code. Also anyone can set up an independent signal server and network.

      And are you maybe confusing Signal with Tor and the CIA with the US Navy?

    • @Robin@lemmy.world
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      410 months ago

      Do you have a source for the CIA backing claim? I can’t find anything substantiated with a quick ddg search.

  • @unknowing8343@discuss.tchncs.de
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    10 months ago

    I just got to know about Delta Chat which sounds fantastic as it basically uses your email but wrapped as chat.

    XMPP and Matrix are other good options too, although these require creating an account (Delta Chat can work with your normal email account).

    The good thing about these last 2 is that they have calls and all that stuff.

  • @alienghic@slrpnk.net
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    110 months ago

    I run my own XMPP server. https://joinjabber.org/ has some introductory information Snickket is a all in one service you can host or your can pay them to host https://snikket.org/start/

    XMPP servers and clients are a lot lighter weight than matrix, though I think matrix has more fancy features.

    They’re both self hostable and are federated to share the costs of running the network.

    With signal there’s a non-profit that needs some pretty steam funding to stay in business. (Though they’re popular so maybe they can get it) https://www.pcmag.com/news/want-to-run-an-encrypted-chat-app-youll-need-50-million-signal-says