- cross-posted to:
- programming@programming.dev
- cross-posted to:
- programming@programming.dev
Wow, this is straight-up fraud. Goes to show that nobody should trust extraordinary claims from closed-source developers.
Yes, this isn’t your average “junior engineer introduces minor bug, exposes volnerability” type of problem, this is very clearly “we know very well this is terrible but we’re selling it using a bunch of buzzwords, so we couldn’t care less”…
Sadly there aren’t a lot of meaningful legal mechanisms to sue these types of scams
Quite frankly, their threats of legal action for a very responsible disclosure and post-mortem for future reference tells you all you need to know, they don’t give two shits about privacy/security
Converso doesn’t care about privacy or security!?
I am not the author, but I found this an amazing write-up
I love this write up! It’s so annoying how many lies are just put on the internet and at such a large scale
I love how they just gave up at the end and pulled the app from all the app stores.
This is a great write up and a good reminder that we should keep companies in check by thoroughly vetting their claims.
Hilarious! Thanks for sharing.
Great write-up. Honestly I found this a bit funny. I assume the marketing is completely separate then the developer/s And nobody really knew what the app is doing :D~~___~~
Even Signal, the gold standard of encrypted messaging Who actually believes this? Journos don’t count, of course.
Converso is not open source lol, lmao
Are you asking who believes that signal is the gold standard? Other encrypted chat services implement “the signal protocol” now, so… if not gold, it’s at least standard.
Their encryption might be good but signal itself is glowie as fuck.