For the record, @amnesty’s privacy ranking of popular messaging apps is wrong, irresponsible & should not be trustedhttps://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/campaigns/2016/10/which-messaging-apps-best-protect-your-privacy/ …
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but they specifically say here they are talking about how secure their end to end encryption is not other aspects of privacy.
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Replying to @request_d
“How private are your favourite messaging apps?” ← that’s the title. That’s what we’re talking about. +
@amnesty1 reply 0 retweets 1 like -
clearly from the article that is not what they are talking about.
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Replying to @request_d
Clearly, from the title & the summary, it is. And their fundamental assumption (e2e encryption = privacy) is flawed +
@amnesty2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes -
but agree "assumption (e2e encryption = privacy) is flawed"
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