How the Signal Knockoff App TeleMessage Got Hacked in 20 Minutes
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Signal uses end-to-end encryption (E2EE). The only copies of messages are on the sender’s and recipient’s devices.
schrieb am 18. Mai 2025, 20:15 zuletzt editiert vonCopies of messages are also known as archives.
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Copies of messages are also known as archives.
schrieb am 18. Mai 2025, 20:25 zuletzt editiert vonSignal does not archive messages on server side
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Signal does not archive messages on server side
schrieb am 18. Mai 2025, 20:27 zuletzt editiert vonThey weren't talking about the server:
This app...works in almost exactly the same way as Signal, except that it also archives copies of all the messages passing through it, shattering all of its security guarantees.
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They weren't talking about the server:
This app...works in almost exactly the same way as Signal, except that it also archives copies of all the messages passing through it, shattering all of its security guarantees.
schrieb am 18. Mai 2025, 20:40 zuletzt editiert vonIt's why Molly has local database encryption.
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They weren't talking about the server:
This app...works in almost exactly the same way as Signal, except that it also archives copies of all the messages passing through it, shattering all of its security guarantees.
schrieb am 18. Mai 2025, 21:12 zuletzt editiert vonLater in the article, it talks specifically about the server-side archives being stored in plain text. That’s why the hacker was able to access messages. This isn’t about the local copies on phones.
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It's why Molly has local database encryption.
schrieb am 18. Mai 2025, 21:22 zuletzt editiert vonThat doesn't really do anything. Attackers need local access to the device to get the database itself. Chances are, they'll get the key right with it.
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That doesn't really do anything. Attackers need local access to the device to get the database itself. Chances are, they'll get the key right with it.
schrieb am 18. Mai 2025, 21:26 zuletzt editiert vonMolly encrypts it using a passphrase instead of a locally stored key for exactly that reason.
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Later in the article, it talks specifically about the server-side archives being stored in plain text. That’s why the hacker was able to access messages. This isn’t about the local copies on phones.
schrieb am 18. Mai 2025, 22:19 zuletzt editiert vonYeah I didn't read past the misinformation
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Yeah I didn't read past the misinformation
schrieb am 19. Mai 2025, 00:32 zuletzt editiert vonKinda seems like you're the misinformation.
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Yeah I didn't read past the misinformation
schrieb am 19. Mai 2025, 00:57 zuletzt editiert vonMaybe you should start reading up on stuff you don't know about before adding nonsense to internet threads.
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Kinda seems like you're the misinformation.
schrieb am 19. Mai 2025, 01:18 zuletzt editiert von ulrich@feddit.orgYou're confused, I am not the author of this article. I did not write the statement above, just copied and pasted it here.
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Maybe you should start reading up on stuff you don't know about before adding nonsense to internet threads.
schrieb am 19. Mai 2025, 01:18 zuletzt editiert von ulrich@feddit.orgDon't know what you mean. I didn't add any "nonsense". Just a direct quote from the article in question.
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This post did not contain any content.schrieb am 19. Mai 2025, 02:12 zuletzt editiert von
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You're confused, I am not the author of this article. I did not write the statement above, just copied and pasted it here.
schrieb am 19. Mai 2025, 02:32 zuletzt editiert vonI'm not confused, you're intentionally misreading what's happening for some reason.
"Passing through it" pretty clearly refers to the server as that's what was hacked into and had plain text archives.
You're hyper fixating on the fact that the article says "the app" when referring to both the phone and server pieces to try and argue... something.
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I'm not confused, you're intentionally misreading what's happening for some reason.
"Passing through it" pretty clearly refers to the server as that's what was hacked into and had plain text archives.
You're hyper fixating on the fact that the article says "the app" when referring to both the phone and server pieces to try and argue... something.
schrieb am 19. Mai 2025, 02:47 zuletzt editiert vonYou are confused. I'm not "intentionally misreading" anything, it was written incorrectly. I'm not trying to argue anything. I'm just reading the (wrong) words used in the article. When I come across a piece of misinformation, I don't continue reading in the hopes that they clear it up later, I write it off and close it.
Someone else cleared this up. There's no reason to continue arguing about it.
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You are confused. I'm not "intentionally misreading" anything, it was written incorrectly. I'm not trying to argue anything. I'm just reading the (wrong) words used in the article. When I come across a piece of misinformation, I don't continue reading in the hopes that they clear it up later, I write it off and close it.
Someone else cleared this up. There's no reason to continue arguing about it.
schrieb am 19. Mai 2025, 02:59 zuletzt editiert von abidanyre@lemmy.world 6. Jan. 2025, 22:59I'm still not confused and you're still missing the forest for the trees because you don't like the common practice of including the server infrastructure when talking about apps.
There was a plaintext archive of messages on a remote server. That's a security problem no matter what point you're trying to make about the term app.
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I'm still not confused and you're still missing the forest for the trees because you don't like the common practice of including the server infrastructure when talking about apps.
There was a plaintext archive of messages on a remote server. That's a security problem no matter what point you're trying to make about the term app.
schrieb am 19. Mai 2025, 03:30 zuletzt editiert vonI do like common terminology, that's the problem.
Once again, this has already been cleared up elsewhere. Since you seem intent on dragging this out for some reason, you're going to be blocked. Have a nice night.
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This post did not contain any content.schrieb am 19. Mai 2025, 04:10 zuletzt editiert von floofloof@lemmy.ca
They sound staggeringly incompetent. And anyone who bought their software without any investigation into its quality also sounds staggeringly incompetent. Apparently there's a lot of it going around.
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Molly encrypts it using a passphrase instead of a locally stored key for exactly that reason.
schrieb am 19. Mai 2025, 05:09 zuletzt editiert vonThe passphrase or the unencrypted database are still open in memory. Though that is, of course, a more complicated attack but they could simply read it through the app itself.
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Maybe you should start reading up on stuff you don't know about before adding nonsense to internet threads.
schrieb am 19. Mai 2025, 05:17 zuletzt editiert vonThis is now the third post in the last 24 hours where I stumble into a needlessly long thread because this user is completely obtuse and can't handle being wrong or a different opinion.
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