Beeper's iMessage App for Android is Back (theverge.com) 82
The faceoff between Apple and Beeper has entered another round. Days after Apple managed to block Beeper Mini from seamlessly sending and receiving iMessages on Android, Beeper says the app is up and running again -- sort of. From a report: See, Beeper Mini works a little differently this time: you must now sign in with an Apple ID, whereas previously it would automatically register you to iMessage via your phone number. Beeper says it's working on a fix to restore phone number registration with iMessage, but until then, your friends won't be able to send iMessages directly to your phone number. Instead, the blue bubbles will have to come to and from your email address. That's not nearly as convenient, but at the end of the day, it's still iMessage.
Another change is that for now, owing to what could escalate into a cat-and-mouse game with Apple, Beeper Mini will be free to use. "Things have been a bit chaotic, and we're not comfortable subjecting paying users to this," the company wrote in a blog post today about the update. The app originally required a $2-per-month subscription. Apple's statement on Friday made clear that it won't hesitate to shut down further attempts to dupe its servers into believing Android phones are genuine Apple devices.
Another change is that for now, owing to what could escalate into a cat-and-mouse game with Apple, Beeper Mini will be free to use. "Things have been a bit chaotic, and we're not comfortable subjecting paying users to this," the company wrote in a blog post today about the update. The app originally required a $2-per-month subscription. Apple's statement on Friday made clear that it won't hesitate to shut down further attempts to dupe its servers into believing Android phones are genuine Apple devices.
Interop (Score:3)
iMessage offers end-to-end encryption, but it's currently exclusively limited by Apple to other iProducts users (everyone else can only exchange "as secure as a postcard" SMS).
That's what Beeper tries to open to other users. It's adversarial interoperability.
It's not about color/prestige status.
see: https://pluralistic.net/2023/1... [pluralistic.net]
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LOL it's totally about the "color/prestige status".
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iMessage lets me know it was received. SMS does not. iMessage allows for large attachments. SMS does not. iMessage works over wifi. SMS does not.
Do my friends and family all have to decide on what third party app to use? No they use iMessage because it comes with the phone.
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SMS works over wifi with most providers. You can even make phone calls over wifi with most providers when no cell signal is available.
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RCS works well. It offers End to End encryption. AND is not locked to a single vendor.
Apple Proprietary stuff is just status of stupid. Check out this article explaining how much of a loser the android user is:
https://www.marieclaire.com/ce... [marieclaire.com]
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RCS works well. It offers End to End encryption. AND is not locked to a single vendor.
That is factually untrue. RCS Universal Profile offers no E2EE. Google's RCS has E2EE so it is locked to a single vendor.
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I'm going to send an SMS to my brother too. Tell me what it says.
You probably can't. And if you can you probably won't. It's not worth your time and energy.
I'm going to send my brother the secret password to get into my secret club. I'm going to use Signal for that.
*Apple* fanbois? (Score:2)
Apple fanbois?
This is an Android app.
It's definitely not targeting Apple fanbois, those would be caught dead rather than be seen with anything but an official iShiny running offiacial Apple App Store apps on it.
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This sort of comment right here makes the whole "blue bubbles are causing bullying" claims to be overblown.
In any online discussion about this or any other Apple topic, it does not take long for the vitriolic abusive anti-Apple comments to come out. People seem to be fine with Apple users being abused and bullied online without recourse, but the moment someone gets bullied over a blue bubble? It must be fixed!
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This sort of comment right here makes the whole "blue bubbles are causing bullying" claims to be overblown.
In any online discussion about this or any other Apple topic, it does not take long for the vitriolic abusive anti-Apple comments to come out. People seem to be fine with Apple users being abused and bullied online without recourse, but the moment someone gets bullied over a blue bubble? It must be fixed!
Yes, because only a fool would voluntarily be held hostage in a walled garden, no matter how nice the garden may be.
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I tend to use my phones for years and I need at least security updates for them.
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IDGAF how lame you are. You wanna try and bully Android users? Go ahead, fucknuts. Nobody gives a shit.
Also, all you Apple-tards look stupid with your liking text messages. How fucking annoying can a person be?
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The War of the Blue Bubbles (Score:2, Insightful)
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iMessage features (Score:2)
iMessage will send only SMS (and MMS) to non-Apple users, but will has many more features when sending messages to other iOS users (including end-to-end encryption).
Beeper tries to bring these Apple-exclusive features to Android users.
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I don't text much, so perhaps I just don't understand this at all, but is there that much envy over the blue vs. green text bubbles that this is something that need be done?
The green/blue bubble thing itself is stupid, but it absolutely is a big thing in some social circles (read: middle/high schoolers and adults that never matured past middle school).
While it's our responsibility as parents to teach our kids to not to let companies manipulate them like that for profit ... Apple's role in encouraging kids ostracizing other kids for not using Apple's products (in order to drive more sales) is more than a little sleazy.
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The green/blue bubble thing itself is stupid, but it absolutely is a big thing in some social circles (read: middle/high schoolers and adults that never matured past middle school).
So... high-tech moguls -- or high, tech moguls. :-)
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I must live in a strange social circle. My peer group is engineers, and absolutely zero of us have ever commented on the bubble color or feature set in either our individual or group chats, and we have a mix of Android and Apple users.
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"Apple's role in encouraging kids ostracizing other kids..."
Apple plays no role in this. Apple distinguishes secured messages from unsecured using the color. Apple also views iMessage as a distinguishing feature. What Apple doesn't do it encourage petty behavior through meaningless differences, that's the user base doing that.
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Apple plays no role in this. Apple distinguishes secured messages from unsecured using the color.
They lock messages from non-Apple devices out of that with their point-blank refusal to support secure messages between Apple and non-Apple devices. It's incredibly disingenuous to pretend that Apple's motivations have anything to do with notifying the users about secured messaging.
Apple also views iMessage as a distinguishing feature.
The only "distinguishing feature" of iMessage is that it doesn't interoperate with other vendor's phones. Which is of course the point, because (despite your claim to the contrary) Apply absolutely loves and encourages petty beh
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Didn't they say that RCS messages would still be green bubbles though? Wouldn't that go against the idea that the bubble color is referencing secured vs unsecured?
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They lock messages from non-Apple devices out of that with their point-blank refusal to support secure messages between Apple and non-Apple devices. It's incredibly disingenuous to pretend that Apple's motivations have anything to do with notifying the users about secured messaging.
Please describe the encryption standard Apple is supposed to use for non-Apple devices they do not control. Hint: such a standard does not exist. What does exist is Google's proprietary implementation, WhatsApp's proprietary implementation, etc.
The only "distinguishing feature" of iMessage is that it doesn't interoperate with other vendor's phones. Which is of course the point, because (despite your claim to the contrary) Apply absolutely loves and encourages petty behavior to drive more sales.
iPhones can send SMS messages to other phones. What you are complaining about is the equivalent of complaining that Hondas do not use Ford software.
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> Apple's role in encouraging kids ostracizing other kids for not using Apple's products (in order to drive more sales) is more than a little sleazy.
Citation needed.
Show me any credible source that says Apple is encouraging this. Heck, I'll take a non-credible source.
There are plenty of things Apple does that are more than a little sleazy and can be fairly criticized. There's no need to make up new ones.
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Everything you said is true. But the original allegation was that Apple was encouraging kids to ostracize other kids. And nobody can come up with a single quote from anyone at Apple even saying that it was a good thing. Even you concede that 'maybe' Apple didn't intend for the blue/green bubbles to become a social stigma. Your worst accusation is that Apple is happy to benefit from it. And you are probably right. But riding a wave is not causing a wave, and we doing blame a surfer if the wave drowns s
as an iphone owner (Score:2)
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Why are iPhone buyers so contemptuous of people that also are iPhone buyers and are not satisfied due to arbitrary policies that Apple puts on the product to protect Apple and not you?
Is it beyond your mental grasp to figure out that they have different product needs than you, and the iPhone doesn't meet those needs? Why be an asshole about their situation being completely different from yours?
I've never understood this, going all the way back to the Mac -vs- PC bullshit. It's a fucking phone, not an iden
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i hope beeper wins, Apples walled garden sucks and not only in the communication dept but also the app store lock in too, this will be my last iphone if apple dont open up ios for that
Buh-Bye!
Why not go elsewhere? (Score:2)
I use Viber for most of my texting and photo sending. It's end-to-end encrypted, works on Apple and Android and nobody's fighting over it.
There's also Signal, Telegram, and a dozen others.
Just take you ball and go... to the next park down the street!
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It comes as news to exactly nobody that there are 3rd party cross-platform messaging networks.
What may come as news to you, is that most users don't want to have to use 14 different networks to talk to the people they need to talk to. This is why iMessage is still used by anyone at all - it's the default, there is no option on iOS to make any other app the default, and it talks to any phone number out there as long as you don't give a fuck what quality and experience a non-iPhone user will receive.
For exam
Account security 101 (Score:2)
Do not share your username and password with third parties.
FFS I can't believe a tech site like /. is trying to defend a company directly asking for username and password info, with what, a cross their fingers promise to keep it safe and secure from leaking?
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Do not share your username and password with third parties.
FFS I can't believe a tech site like /. is trying to defend a company directly asking for username and password info, with what, a cross their fingers promise to keep it safe and secure from leaking?
Beeper (Mini) does not require an Apple ID or any credentials to be shared with Beeper. It performs validation via SMS
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Yeah, you have to be careful with that, we're not Reddit yet.
Trivial to shutdown (Score:2)
Re:Trivial to shutdown (Score:5, Interesting)
There are multiple ways Apple can shut this down, and they will. Which is a shame. Apple has the choice of either allowing secure and private communication, or making more money. Apple has constantly chosen more money, by making sure that when their customers communicate with non-Apple folks, the messages are insecure and non-private. That's Apple's right, of course. But I'm tired of people claiming that Apple prioritizes privacy and security, when Apple has constantly demonstrated the opposite.
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Especially since there is an argument to be made that shutting down cross-platform iMessage support is harming Apple's users that send things to Android users via essentially clear text SMS.
If they're all about protecting their users' privacy, why are they leaving such a glaring hole that is completely in their power to fix?
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It's not an argument, it's a fact.
If you use Apple devices and iMessage, then you are giving money to the company which could secure your communications but chooses not to. Their oft stated motive is money; if they let iMessage on non-Apple devices, then they believe that some people may switch from iOS to Android, costing Apple profit.
This is your choice. You can give your money to a company which has demonstrated that your privacy and security are less important than their profit margin. I mean, I choo
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There are multiple ways Apple can shut this down, and they will. Which is a shame. Apple has the choice of either allowing secure and private communication, or making more money. Apple has constantly chosen more money, by making sure that when their customers communicate with non-Apple folks, the messages are insecure and non-private. That's Apple's right, of course. But I'm tired of people claiming that Apple prioritizes privacy and security, when Apple has constantly demonstrated the opposite.
Not defending Apple, on the contrary, what I'm about to say is one of the leading causes of insecurity in many important sectors including banking.
If they make things secure, it'll annoy people into not using it.
If they do that, people will just start using WhatsApp or something similar (yes, people know Meta is datamining it, they just don't care and no, nothing you say is interesting enough for them to care about whilst we're at it). So Apple needs to keep the system insecure, this means they'll alw
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I don't understand your argument. Both iMessage and RCS+E2EE are secure and private. (Secure and private for mass-market chat systems, at least, but that's all most people want.) The insecure and non-private systems are SMS and MMS. (Note that to implement iMessage or RCS you need access to texting services (SMS) so that there is a fallback.)
Google wants RCS+E2EE on all systems. It's available on all Android phones and is starting to appear on feature phones, but Apple will not allow it on iPhones. Ap
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. Apple has the choice of either allowing secure and private communication, or making more money. Apple has constantly chosen more money, by making sure that when their customers communicate with non-Apple folks, the messages are insecure and non-private.
Please tell me how Apple will implement E2EE on devices they do not control that have hardware that they did not specify. I would to know how you think encryption algorithms not baked into the device's hardware will get implemented. Also how does Apple use a Secure Enclave system in devices that do not have one.
That's Apple's right, of course. But I'm tired of people claiming that Apple prioritizes privacy and security, when Apple has constantly demonstrated the opposite.
Implementing security is not a triv
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Please tell me how Apple will implement E2EE on devices they do not control
I mean, Google managed to implement E2EE on all android phones, even though the hardware and many pieces of the software are controlled by the manufacturer. And I believe that other vendors are following Google's spec for E2EE over RCS, though I don't know if any are released yet.
The fact of the matter is Apple designed their own solution when no one else had one
Ummm... E2EE solutions for messaging systems predate iMessage and the iPhone. I'm sorry that you think that Apple invented the concept, but they didn't. They just wrote one particular implementation of the concept. I seem to re
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It would also cut off any Apple device that isn't under current software support, since Beeper is using Apple's own client connection services to create the link. This means cutting off potentially thousands of legitimate users (and creating user hardship / ill-will) to try to fuck over some upstart that is just trying to do what Apple should have done years ago.
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Apple could choose to send out an update for iOS12. They did it a few months ago for another issue.
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There's also about 5+ major versions of Mac OS X that would get dumped too. iMessage is not just an iPhone thing.
I don't think that's the issue... (Score:1)
Til Apple breaks it again (Score:2)
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Downloading? No, it isn't that hard.
Convincing someone that they need to download, sign up for, verify, and use a specific app just to talk to me? That's the height of arrogance, and anyone with any self-worth would tell you to go fuck yourself.
Why are you so important that someone else should change how they interact with everyone else they know just to appease you?
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Downloading? No, it isn't that hard.
Convincing someone that they need to download, sign up for, verify, and use a specific app just to talk to me? That's the height of arrogance, and anyone with any self-worth would tell you to go fuck yourself.
Why are you so important that someone else should change how they interact with everyone else they know just to appease you?
Instead you just tell them to get an iPhone.
the irony
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No, I don't. But thanks for assuming, wildly incorrectly.
Currently holding a Pixel 7 Pro in my pocket.
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I do not, but good wrong assumption.
I don't try to force other people to live their lives my way.
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In Europe, they all download WhatsApp, as do all the Android users.
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whack-a-mole (Score:2)
Hi, I'm the mole, please whack me!
Seems like an odd stance to take with Apple, the results are guaranteed.