• gregorum@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    “Oh, what’s this unauthorized bullshit on our servers?”

    [block]

    I’m just surprised that it took this long

    • wrath_of_grunge@kbin.social
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      same. there seems to be a lot of people that don’t realize some things don’t get done, not because they’re impossible, but because as soon as they do it a company will put a stop to it.

      it’s like cracking a Xbox or something. the very next patch will render the method obsolete and nonviable. when i heard this workaround was coming for Android, my immediate reaction was how long it would last before Apple just changed something so that it doesn’t work.

        • KISSmyOS@lemmy.world
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          Back it up on my hard drive and I’ll close your gaping security hole with my hotfix, sweetheart.

      • LinuxSBC@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Their hope was that they got close enough to an actual Apple device that breaking it would break Apple devices. It turns out they weren’t close enough, but they could be with a few improvements.

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      Probably had to be extra careful to test. MDM software software might get glitched out.

    • drislands@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I’m really curious about how it was detected, how it was different from Apple devices. If nothing else I’m looking forward to reading about how that all worked.

      • AProfessional@lemmy.world
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        It is usually easy to detect a specific client. Like even if you ignore the keys there are dozens of little details like the TLS fingerprint of whatever library they use not matching iOS. Things that are easy to miss and sometimes hard to bypass. Then there are heuristics on how it is used is likely unique.

      • LinuxSBC@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        From what I understand, their guess is that Apple is now checking if the device also has support for other services, such as FaceTime. Beeper Mini and pypush don’t pretend to support FaceTime, so it breaks.

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    Can all the folks saying “I don’t care” on this just stop? If this doesn’t affect you, why are you commenting at all?

    Some smart folks managed to reverse engineer Apple’s secretive tech that they refuse to put on any platform they don’t own, which is fucking awesome. Even if you don’t give a shit about using iMessage, it’s awesome they were able to stick it to Apple at all, and make the gap between iPhone and Android that much smaller.

    And of course Apple comes in and breaks it. Do you not wonder why? Does this mean there was a minor security hole that was exploited or was it something else that changed? This arms race is fascinating, regardless of your preferred mobile OS.

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      We’re literally on a platform designed to escape these closed ecosystems and walled gardens. A platform built around open communication standards.

      And still there’s a downright bizarre contingent of people around here that seem to be chomping at the bit to defend or downplay Apple’s iMessage shit.

      • RGB3x3@lemmy.world
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        That’s funny when most of the comments are saying “just use WhatsApp” as if that’s not a walled garden for messaging.

      • willya@lemmyf.uk
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        I’ve found the complete opposite on here. Outside of the apple communities but even those get trolled/downvoted from nerds browsing all like everything else.

        • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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          Yes, but no. RCS itself is. Google RCS however, not especially. Google keeps promising to open up the bits they’ve tacked on but have yet to. Which includes things like the open end-to-end encryption. Apple will be implementing vanilla RCS which does not have that yet. But they have claimed if I remember correctly that they are going to help develop that. I don’t know if I believe that or if that’s just something they said to foster some false Goodwill

    • Dmian@lemmy.world
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      The “I don’t care” crowd could be the rest of the world, that use messaging apps instead of SMS or iMessages. Try to consider this factor first. Not everything should be centered in America, or exclusively to what happens there.

      • drislands@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I understand that. But that doesn’t have anything to do with my point, which is that if someone doesn’t care about this issue, they don’t need to show how much they don’t care.

        In fact, I would argue that your general sentiment – that of considering others in different situations than oneself – applies more to the people acting like this topic doesn’t matter because it doesn’t affect them personally.

        • Dmian@lemmy.world
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          Guess you’re right. I’m not justifying them, but trying to put a bit of light into why a lot of people don’t care. I’m not the kind of person to express such a moot opinion, but I guess some people get tired of seeing a conversation that only affects only a portion of people and feel the need to express their feelings. Again, I’m the kind to remain silent, but there are all kinds of people out there.

    • satan@r.nf
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      Can all the folks saying “I don’t care” on this just stop? If this doesn’t affect you, why are you commenting at all?

      Haven’t you heard? Lemmings are all about “Stay alone in a basement and never get out and socialize, because people use something you don’t agree with. If they really want to talk to you, they’ll switch.”

      They didn’t, but now they’re on lemmy with more people with the same attitude, trying to socialize but never realizing why they don’t have any friends.

      Reddit migration brought all the entitled, self agrandizing, freeloading, weirdos to the fediverse.

      • sour@kbin.social
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        people use something you can’t use because walled garden

        joined 1 month ago

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    The fact that people care about whether their messages are blue or green is so absolutely ridiculous.

    I’ve known people who literally refuse to message anyone who doesn’t use iMessage (and by extension has an iPhone).

    Every one of them turned out to be a twat in every other facet of their personality as well.

      • Joelk111@lemmy.world
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        That’s what I’d do if I ever came across such a person. I haven’t had the pleasure yet fortunately.

    • CrowAirbrush@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      This reminds me of the blackberry ping days, everyone and their mom acting like a diva for having a sidekick blackberry just to use ping.

      Those were better days financially.

      • WashedOver@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        BBM was the jam back in the days before iPhone. If you wanted to be in on the group chats you needed a blackberry. In the last little bit they opened it up to more devices but the gig was up.

        I still miss their icons.

        • TheFerrango@lemmy.basedcount.com
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          They were never popular over here outside of business users, I always liked the tiny red LED. Sure, I can make the flag on my iPhone blink on new messages, but it’s not the same

          • WashedOver@lemmy.ca
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            Yes the light was the best. Some of the early android devices tried to carry on with this practice but screen time attention I suspect won the day

            • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
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              But Android phones still have multicolor notification led. In fact it blows my mind that iPhones don’t, I wouldn’t even consider a phone without it anymore.

    • WashedOver@lemmy.ca
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      Yes had a business owner come in and demand all employee phones be iPhone or get out. Jobs was his personal hero and thought Apple could do no wrong. The issue was the company he bought was run on software made for Windows. A lot of extra effort went into making it work on macbooks he insisted we all use.

      In the end he believed he was as great as Jobs. Not sure that’s a great role model across the board for those that know more than just the apple procducts. The family values and toxic *work practices were not for everyone.

      I was glad to get out of that company and back to my android phone and now Linux computing.

      I will say the 3 good things about my iPhone was the camera, the full resolution media sharing with other iPhone users via iMessage, and the gallery uploading to other iOS devices.

      The latter two are still a weakness with Google. At least they are addressing it with RCS but its still going to take time. Google photos has cloud back up but I’ve not really looked into how seamless the media backup to all android devices has been.

      • Tech With Jake@lemm.ee
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        Google photos is just cloud back up like iCloud backup for iOS devices.

        Google photos is also on iOS devices, so you could have your photos on any of your devices.

    • excitingburp@lemmy.world
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      Apparently it breaks group chats, notwithstanding that it’s an Apple problem, Signal exists and doesn’t feature any of this nonsense.

      • garretble@lemmy.world
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        I’m in more than one group chat with android people, and it’s fine.

        It’s just that you can’t use some iMessage features. But nothing is really broken.

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      It’s because it breaks all the nice extra functionality of iMessage. iMessage is closer to Discord chats; You can do things like react to messages, send live emojis, spoiler/emphasize text, edit/delete sent messages, see when someone is typing, see read receipts, automatically send check-ins when you arrive at a destination, draw doodles, send full quality media, share galleries natively, etc… But as soon as someone with an android joins the group chat, all of that goes out the window and you’re stuck with boring old SMS.

      Is it intentionally hostile on Apple’s part to bar androids from joining? Yes. But the reactions from Apple users aren’t entirely unjustified, because they’re left with a noticeably reduced feature set as soon as someone forces them to use green bubbles.

      • paintbucketholder@lemmy.world
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        Is it intentionally hostile on Apple’s part to bar androids from joining? Yes. But the reactions from Apple users aren’t entirely unjustified

        The reaction from Apple users is to blame Android users - which is entirely unjustified.

        But of course, post purchase rationalization and brand loyalty play a big part in why people want to externalize blame rather than questioning their own decision or blaming their favorite company for providing a shitty cross-platform messaging experience.

      • speeding_slug@feddit.nl
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        So why not use something like WhatsApp or Signal instead then? Sounds like a terrible user experience to me. Nobody I know uses iMessage, everybody uses WhatsApp instead, which is platform agnostic.

        But I’m European, so the iPhone penetration is lower iirc and they can’t stay in their bubble as much.

        • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
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          Because Whatsapp users are just as big “twats” as you call it. Try functioning without Whatsapp in Europe, you can’t, and no amount of excuses will get you out of it.

          Any messaging network starts acting like peer pressure once enough people around you are using it

          • JGrffn@lemmy.world
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            I’m personally dying to see the DMA do its magic. If there’s even a dreamy chance of not having to have the big messaging apps installed on my phone in order to talk to people on these platforms, then I don’t want to stop dreaming.

            • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
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              In theory it would be trivial to open up the big networks, if they were each willing to expose a public, open API. The APIs don’t even have to be interoperable directly, they could let the client apps deal with that. It could be rolled out super fast if they wanted to – couple of months.

              But of course none of them actually wants this, so I expect they will fight it tooth and nail, while not appearing to do so. Meaning they’ll drag this out for as long as possible while blaming each other. I expect RCS will be a perfect red herring for this, because of its complexity and the ability to blame interop issues on each other.

            • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
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              My point wasn’t specifically about Whatsapp, it’s that you have to use what the others around you use.

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      Welcome to Middle School. Blue bubble and ‘Find My’ support are feature drivers. You’re either in or out.

      Ironically, Spotify and x-platform playlist sharing (aka mixtapes) drive counter-adoption.

      Go figure.

    • Pseudonaut@lemmy.today
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      Beeper is more than that. Beeper MINI is about that. But I’ve been using Beeper on my PC for the past year because I am so tired of picking up my phone a million times a day just to send someone a message. I’d say probably 90% of the people I know use iPhone/iMessage so having the ability to message them on desktop was a lifesaver for me. Really bummed it’s not working anymore.

    • Swuden@lemmy.world
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      This is literally perpetuated by schoolyard bullying. Anyone over the age of 20 will very likely be entirely out of touch with how big a deal green/blue is for pre-teens and teens these days. It’s pretty much a cornerstone in teen social structures.

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      I don’t know what may have changed as I am an iPhone user, but about 10 years ago I worked in a small security role for a fairly large company, and the communications company we were using was more than happy to hand over sms logs as plain text. I would personally never send messages to anyone I was sure wasn’t encrypted and I can tell that by the blue bubble. I just don’t know when it is green.

      I don’t know what has changed as I don’t keep up with it, but I am still dubious about messaging outside the Apple ecosystem, which is ok for me as I live in a country where most people use iOS

      • Natanael@slrpnk.net
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        RCS on Android defaults to E2E encryption now since some year back, and Signal has been around for a long time now

    • Snekeyes@lemmy.world
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      Uh. It’s not that. Along w that is videos w potato quality, messages that never make it. Of course anyone reading your comment knows you missed the point.

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        Yeah.

        Because Apple has a proprietary messaging format. They won’t adopt the standard the rest of the world uses or open theirs up for others to use.

      • Tech With Jake@lemm.ee
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        It’s definitely the blue vs green bubbles. Your average user doesn’t even know iMessage is E2EE. They also don’t care.

        • whofearsthenight@lemm.ee
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          Def agree that the vast majority don’t care about E2EE (though that’s probably growing with more news articles like that one where they went after someone for abortion and got their Facebook messages to prove it) I think it’s less about blue/green and more about how shitty the interop is. I don’t know anyone who is like “I won’t talk to green bubbles” but I know plenty who get annoyed when it fucks up the group chat or either side is stuck looking at a postage-stamp sized grainy image (if it even gets delivered.) Really, really blows that the predominate message services in the states are Apple-only iMessage, owned by Facebook, or SMS. I’m over 30, so I am not on Snap and most of my friends aren’t, I refuse to use Facebook products, so we’re stuck with SMS.

    • lefixxx@lemmy.world
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      Its not absolutely ridiculous and you sound like an idiot who thinks that everyone lives in the same little bubble as you.

    • rdri@lemmy.world
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      You sure it’s about that? What I heard is that being outside of “trusted” zone means less features such as media and encryption. Also the person in this article says apple users are basically forced to use sms to send messages to Android users. I too would not want to resort to plain paid messages if my partner doesn’t have the right app.

      • DoomBot5@lemmy.world
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        IPhone users have access to WhatsApp, Signal, and other apps android users use to communicate without sms

        • SkepticalButOpenMinded@lemmy.ca
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          The problem is that, in the US and Canada, android users don’t tend to use those apps en masse. The vast majority use SMS.

          • Fleddit@sh.itjust.works
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            I think at this point the majority of Android users use RCS, which Apple is actually going to implement next year.

              • whofearsthenight@lemm.ee
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                It’s not as good as we want it to be. Those using RCS on Android are almost all using Google’s specific implementation, Apple is instead going to be using a more standard implementation. It’s probably going to work better than SMS, but it’s going to be a far cry from everyone just using any modern internet messaging service.

        • rdri@lemmy.world
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          Yeah, but iphone users are different as they already have some default app that they could use instead of installing other apps. Wouldn’t they want to use that default app as often as possible if their partners have the same ability from their pov? I mean it’s not about the color as the original comment thinks, but about the stuff that the different color implies. Not the thing that is nice to the eyes, but the actual convenience and price.

      • Adderbox76@lemmy.ca
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        I worked in the cellular space for about 20 years off and on before moving to other pastures. I guarantee you that maybe one in a thousand think like you.

        BY FAR the average buyer that Apple targets come in two flavors.

        First, the “I’m cool and all my friends are doing it” and second is the “I’m the father, I don’t personally give a shit but my daughter/son wants us all to be on iMessage.”

  • filister@lemmy.world
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    Apples was and is still extremely anti-competitive and anti-consumers oriented.

    • Dmian@lemmy.world
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      Apple has always been a closed ecosystem, doing things “their way”. When they only sold computers, it was a niche company, with a niche audience. Then they started selling music players and phones, and they became a popular company.

      The blue vs green bubble is just an American problem, that still use SMS as their main messaging protocol. The rest of the world use messaging app, like WhatsApp. It’s truly fascinating watching these events from outside the US.

      • Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        As a German I see more glances of WhatsApp on iPhones than iMessage.

        But I have to be honest: The video call is very neat in the Apple ecosystem.

        • Dmian@lemmy.world
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          We are lucky the EU is forcing them to adopt standards and not abuse their power. Maybe we’ll see some progress. New iPhones coming with USB-C is a good start and, ironically, I think it will make them sell more phones. But regarding blue vs green bubbles, the massive adoption of WhatsApp in the EU (fuelled by the greed of European Telcos charging per SMS) made us immune to this discussion.

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              I just looked at a mobile plan in Movistar (Spain). The page is in Spanish, but I guess you can understand the part I marked in red.

              • DominusOfMegadeus@sh.itjust.works
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                Well, seeing as I pay $90 a month for my phone with Verizon, I would burn everything down if they tried charging me for SMS. Hypothetically.

          • Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            For that for now.

            I am looking forward to how it will progress.
            So far I felt like we are doing a downward trend towards the US style of living.

            • Dmian@lemmy.world
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              It’s interesting: in all my ignorance, my perception is that it’s the Germans the ones that feel more and more like the Americans (other than the British). But it may be just a wrong perception on my part. I honestly don’t know for certain.

              Edit: a small note: you still gave the Greens and the Pirate Party to the EU Parliament, that are the best thing to ever happen to it. :D

      • Chriswild@lemmy.world
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        Originally they focused on computers that could do more for less. They encouraged people to open them up and upgrade or mod them.

        It wasn’t till the 2000’s that they started locking everything down.

        • Dmian@lemmy.world
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          But remember: instead of going with DOS, or a PC compatible system, they developed their own OS. It’s always been closed. And doing things “their way”.

          I’ve been a Mac user for more than 30 years, and I’ve always been isolated from the PC ecosystem. No PC Card was ever usable with a Mac, until they changed to Intel processors in 2005, and even then, you didn’t have drivers for those, you have to rely on some outside development. You could barely read PC files, and most PCs couldn’t read Mac files without external software until Apple changed to Mac OS X in 2001. PC peripherals were incompatible (different connectors and electrical requirements) until Apple introduced USB with the iMac in 1998 (and the PC ecosystem caught up with it).

          While Macs were (somewhat) upgradeable, you needed to buy Mac specific parts to do it, made by Apple approved vendors.

          So, It’s always been a walled garden. I know, I was there before the iPhone, before the iPod. They’re doing nothing different from when they started. The difference is in society: internet appeared, and we now expect everything to work with everything. We expect to be interconnected. But Apple? They always liked to be their own thing, to be different (“think different”, remember?).

          So, it’s just normal Apple behaviour. Expecting anything different is not knowing what Apple really is. Fortunately, the EU thinks doing things “the Apple way” is no longer valid, and is forcing them to adopt standards, and don’t abuse their position. But they’re doing it reluctantly, complaining, and putting a fight.

          • Kazumara@feddit.de
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            The way you use “PC” as a synonym for “Windows” proves that you are indeed a long term Mac user.

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            There is truth in what you’re saying, but I think it’s missing a lot of nuance especially when it comes to why a lot of the things you’re saying are true. A few quick things:

            instead of going with DOS

            Apple developed the original Mac OS to be the first major GUI OS, and MS was left struggling to catch up. Going with DOS would have been a major step back, and set computing back significantly.

            always been isolated from the PC ecosystem.

            which was originally more to do with IBM than Apple.

            You could barely read PC files, and most PCs couldn’t read Mac files without external software until Apple changed to Mac OS X in 2001.

            This was less because Apple wanted it to be that way, and more because Microsoft wanted it that way. The reason things switched in 2001 isn’t specifically because of OS X, it’s because Apple did a deal with MS in '99 or so (and MS only did it likely to avoid more regulatory scrutiny after losing an anti-trust case) and part of that deal was more interoperability. Apple had advertising campaigns basically saying “don’t worry, you can switch to Mac and bring your files with you.”

            They’re doing nothing different from when they started.

            This is also true, but again misses a crucial piece of context - they do it that way because they think it’s generally better and makes better products, and I think you’d generally have to be pretty unstable to argue otherwise. Think about snapshots in time - in the 80’s when it was DOS and original Mac OS. Do our computers look and work like DOS or Mac now? Compare modern laptops to a '94 powerbook or whatever was on the PC market. The modern phone and the modern OS compared to what came before iPhone. Or take a gander what Android looked like pre/post iPhone announcement; spoilers, it was a blackberry knock off instead of an iPhone knock off.) Even Windows today looks and acts more like macOS than it has since probably the 3.1 days.

            Even some of the more seemingly shitty decisions follow this pattern. Remember, iMessage came out at a time when messages cost either $5-20 for what would now seem like an absurdly small block of messages a month or $0.10 a message. Its initial value prop was that it was stupid to pay that much and if you bought an iPhone you could cut your bill way down. Or Lightning instead of micro USB. MicroUSB couldn’t fulfill all of the functions Lightning could, and it’s a worse connector for a lot of reasons.

            I mean, that said, iMessage was definitely designed to keep you on iPhone and it’s being deliberately used as lock in, and there are plenty of other shitty things about Apple (like any other corp) but the virulence with which people hate it is often just because they do not get it any more than I see people mindlessly bash Linux usually with insults that haven’t been true since 2006.

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          The locking down started with the original MacIntosh (or actually with the Lisa I guess). ISTR they had at least one bit more open period after that, but those have always been the exception.

        • Phrodo_00@lemmy.world
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          Not really, they’ve always been big on being incompatible for the sake of locking in people: adb, FireWire, iPod requiring iTunes, etc.

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        But also comparing an apple owned app to a Facebook owned app is hilarious.

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          Really? Why is that? Why you can’t compare two instant messaging apps? What is so hilarious?

          Btw, WhatsApp was made by a different company, and then bought by Meta, when it was already the most used instant messaging app in the EU. And it has a lot of really nice features. There’s a reason so many people use it.

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            Yes, I know all of this. What do you think meta is doing with all that data?

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              You mean all that metadata? As far as we know, all messages are e2e encrypted and no one has proven it otherwise.

              • Womble@lemmy.world
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                e2ee means the message text is encrypted. Obviously metadata isnt as you cant hide where you want your message to be delivered to or what time it is sent.

                • Phrodo_00@lemmy.world
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                  Yeah, that’s what I’m saying. The only available information is the metadata, not messages

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        Wouldn’t it be more correct to say that most Americans also use a messaging app (iMessage). The rest are just stuck with SMS to have compatibility with the iPhone users.

        As the iPhone was (is?) not as popular in the Europe as it was (is) in the States that might also be one of the reasons why people here ditched SMS so fast once smartphones got popular.

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          But it’s not “most”, it’s more like half of Americans use iMessage (that’s not an app, it’s a service, the app is called Messages), and the other half uses SMS with different apps.

          The factor that moved people away from SMS in the EU was telecom companies charging for it. SMS is virtually free for telecom companies, but European companies got greedy, and people moved to WhatsApp. They tried to block it, but accepted defeat after a while.

          In the US, SMS is free with your phone plan, and it became popular with young people until iMessage appeared. Since iPhones are still subsidized by US telcos (afaik, correct me if I’m wrong), a lot of young people have iPhones and use iMessage, that’s far superior to SMS.

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      Remember this is the same company that has to either comply with the EU bridging regulation between messaging platforms or withdraw from the market.

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        I think they dodged that as well… https://arstechnica.com/?p=1989111

        “Android users’ hopes that Apple’s iMessage would be forced to open up in the European Union have been dashed. Bloomberg reports that iMessage won’t qualify for the EU’s new “Digital Markets Act,” allowing Apple to keep iMessage exclusive to Apple users. …”

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                  Same here, I also have every single one of those. I’ve found that Telegram has become better than WhatsApp with their continuous improvements but not many people want to use it even after they download it “because nobody else uses it”. 🙃

    • blicky_blank@lemmy.today
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      I remember in the ipod days plugging a CD into the aul PC and ripping all the files as aac… A format that would only play in iTunes

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        I had an arcos jukebox before the first iPod came out, every time they’d release a new version it’s big feature would be something my jukebox had always done. Except it didn’t have an awkward spinning selector wheel or celebrity endorsements.

        I could connect it to the cd player and record the whole thing as mp3s, I think it even used to split the tracks automatically but I might be wrong. Plug it into usb and it’s a HDD ready to have anything copied to it without hassle… No need for shitty iTunes, no complaints about wav files and never found an MP3 it couldn’t play.

        I remember thinking that surely people will realize over priced and feature limited products are an insult but no, the kids of the future I had so much hope for turned out to be gen z who care more about brand recognition than anyone ever before. I still think the feature rich generics will have their day, maybe generation alpha…

        • CthuluVoIP@lemmy.world
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          “Awkward spinning selector wheel”

          Say what you want, but the iPod click wheel was anything but awkward. It was the most approachable and efficient interface and hardware on the market by miles and miles. Navigating other similar devices without it is an awful experience of buttons and layered menus that feel clunky and slow.

          I won’t deny that the Arcos and other jukeboxes were incredible devices, but they lacked accessibility and mass appeal. Their size and expense kept most people from even considering getting one. They were absolutely an enthusiast’s device and nothing more.

          The iPod ushered in the boom of portable media players and paved the road for Apple’s performance in the mobile phone space by establishing them as purveyors of a superior form factor and experience when it came to those devices. Apple owes its continued success in its personal computer and tablet product lines to the iPod’s design and their decision to focus on creating a cohesive ecosystem across their products based on those design principles.

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      Right, I don’t understand why these weird hacky services are making headlines. If you want to have a blue bubble, just buy an iPhone. They’re not actually THAT expensive, you can usually buy last year’s model for under $500 if you wait for a deal and you’re willing to commit to a carrier. Or if you really can’t afford that, you can get an older iPhone basically for free. Even a 3 year old model gets you a blue bubble.

      Or, if you’re not an insecure child that gives in to peer pressure, get whatever phone you want.

        • Track_Shovel@slrpnk.net
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          This.

          I had an iPhone for a decade with my work. Quit both of them and got an android. I’m way happier being able to do things more than one way and to be able to customize everything.

          Phones in general suck, but if the shitty, android at least let’s you do what you want.

        • Earthwormjim91@lemmy.world
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          lol ok.

          The vast majority of androids are worse for repairability. The ones that get more than a year or two of support don’t have any parts available. The ones that do get support have far worse physical restrictions like straight up gluing parts in.

          The rest you mention, >99% of people don’t do anyway.

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            Are you talking about iPhone? Because repairing an iPhone requires specialist tools and specialist software. Oh, and it’s all glued together. 100% of people are unable to repair their own iPhone with replacement parts because parts are serialized and require proprietary software to unlock.

            If you want to support these anti-consumer practices, that’s up to you, but there’s really no need to spread misinformation.

            • Earthwormjim91@lemmy.world
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              lol the only specialist tool you need is the pentalobe screwdriver and a suction cup. None of the rest is needed, it just makes it easy.

              And unlocking the hardware for use just requires calling Apple support and saying “hey I’ve replaced this part and need it unlocked, here’s the serial”.

              Nothing in an iPhone is solidly glued in. The battery has a couple of pull tabs to make it easy to remove. Something like a Samsung it’s damn near impossible to remove because the entire battery is glued down.

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            But if you care, you can get a repairable phone like the Fairphone.

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        It’s not just the blue bubble though. It’s being able to send and receive full quality pictures and videos to iPhone users without having to get them to install a 3rd party app. All the old people in my family have iPhone. They won’t learn Signal. Beeper bridged that gap.

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          Sounds like an iOS problem for iOS users to deal with. If I have a family member with Android, we just agree on a chat service to use and iMessage isn’t even a part of that conversation. Older members who need help can get their stuff set up during a family visit, until which a few green bubbles won’t hurt anyone.

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            Here’s how this goes for most people in the US:

            If I have a family member with Android, we just agree on a chat service to use and iMessage isn’t they’re not even a part of that conversation.

        • PeachMan@lemmy.world
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          Then use ANY other messaging service. Preferably Signal, but if that doesn’t work… Facebook, Whatsapp, literally anything.

          • 𝒍𝒆𝒎𝒂𝒏𝒏@lemmy.one
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            Then use ANY other messaging service. Preferably Signal,

            🤩

            but if that doesn’t work… Facebook, Whatsapp, literally anything.

            So Facebook, or Facebook? That might work for most people, but when there’s an open protocol right there, I’d rather steer clear of their products and services

            Edit: add quotes

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        Even a 3 year old model gets you a blue bubble.

        Damn, we calling 3 years old now? My iPhone 6 must be from the Paleolithic era then.

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          Lol I said it’s 3 years old, not “old”. That’s the not-so-secret secret of today’s phones: a 2 or 3 year old phone works just fine.

      • Unlocalhost@lemmy.world
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        So how is someone who makes a conscious choice giving into peer pressure and insecure

        No other introspective reasons why someone could select a phone othe than an iPhone.

        • Pheonixdown@lemm.ee
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          They said if you’re buying solely based bubble color then it’s based on peer pressure, there of course are other valid reasons for someone to choose one and there are also other bad reasons.

        • PeachMan@lemmy.world
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          I didn’t say that people only buy iPhones because of peer pressure. I said that buying an iPhone due to peer pressure is silly.

      • Dr. Moose@lemmy.world
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        The point is open communication standard and tech illiterates like yourself keep repeating this Apple propaganda. Maybe read a wiki page or something idk

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        I have a 5 year old iphone, it’s great. I can’t imagine it’s worth anything, just noting it works for every day use. You don’t need a new phone at all for anything.

        ETA: I just NFC-charged my local transit card with my ancient-ass iphone the other day which is a thing I didn’t honestly know it could do yesterday. I’m not trolling, I don’t know what has been offered in the last 5 years on either platform that is at all required to use a phone, as long as Apple continues to support the phone with OS updates.

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        My thoughts exactly. It’s fucking childish to make such a fuss over the color of a text bubble. These kids need to grow up.

  • Paragone@lemmy.world
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    Illegal Anti-Competitive / Cartel behaviour, yes??

    Apple, you are only exempt-from-law UNTIL the regulators decide to do their jobs honestly.

    THEN, you’re hosed.

    _ /\ _

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      I mean, even the EU already exempted iMessage from the new rules.

      Because they already follow a standard. SMS and MMS.

      And with them adopting RCS? There’s nothing they can force to open iMessage.

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      It is a great app, but you cannot fit everyone into a single app.

      Examples why I personally sometimes don’t want to use Signal:

      • no native desktop app, just a half-baked Electron based thing
      • no versions for systems other than Android and iOS
      • requires phone number (common argument)
      • hard to integrate bots, notifications and automatic services for the future use
      • when Signal foundation do something stupid, it would mean me having to migrate all friends yet another time

      Signal is super giga great, the cons list is short, but if we want everyone to use something it has to be an universal protocol, not one app.

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        no versions for systems other than Android and iOS

        requires phone number (common argument)

        Ok, those are legitimate complaints, and I suspect they’re related too. It would be nice to have a web client.

        hard to integrate bots, notifications and automatic services for the future use

        Personally, I’d say that’s a feature.

        Signal is super giga great, the cons list is short, but if we want everyone to use something it has to be an universal protocol, not one app.

        To be fair, signal is an open source protocol that anyone is free to implement. Signal protocol

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          To be fair, signal is an open source protocol that anyone is free to implement.

          “The Signal Protocol (formerly known as the TextSecure Protocol) is a non-federated cryptographic protocol that provides end-to-end encryption for voice and instant messaging conversations[…]”

          Signal is an encryption protocol, not messaging protocol. My comment was about a messaging one like XMPP or Matrix.

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        Honestly for most people this is a crazy level of paranoia. The US government can know the metadata of my friends birthday party organization group.

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            Because it’s a significant inconvenience to disable those notifications over the very unlikely possibility that some bad actor will hoover that data up, much less do something nefarious with it.

            • Cocodapuf@lemmy.world
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              Ah, fair enough.

              I realize now that I misunderstood the objection, I thought you were saying that using signal was an unreasonable level of paranoia, but I can totally see why turning off notifications seems that way.

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            Honestly I don’t care if the government knows who’s all going to the party. Someone’s gonna post pictures of it anyhow. My garbage data is just more stuff for them to sort through.

            And I’m not gonna bother missing out on everything out of fear that the government will do what exactly with my data? The risk is so low for your average person.

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              You say that, but what if one of them had a friend who is a communist? Could make for some awkward conversation with the authorities at some undisclosed location in the future.

            • Cocodapuf@lemmy.world
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              I realize now that I misunderstood the objection, I thought you were saying that using signal was an unreasonable level of paranoia, but I can totally see why turning off notifications seems that way.

          • Chobbes@lemmy.world
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            Signal push notifications don’t contain any useful plain text data (no content, no information about who sent you a message). AFAIK the only thing you would be leaking is that you received a message on signal, and frankly that metadata is probably going to be leaked to the US government regardless of your use of push notifications.

            • notenoughbutter@lemmy.ml
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              frankly that metadata is probably going to be leaked to the US government regardless of your use of push notifications.

              How?

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                  They can tell you connect to AWS when the Signal app fetches messages after a notification, they need to be able to peek into Amazon’s servers to see you’re connecting specifically to Signal

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      Saw a few comments in the initial threads about it confidently claiming Apple wouldn’t be able to keep Beeper Mini out since doing so would mess with iOS too.

      Super weird to be so sure about that when they obviously didn’t know shit about it.

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        All they need to do is look for which Apple devices are being used as proxies and blacklist them

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            Does it make a difference? They still need to use Apple accounts and spoof real devices (serial numbers, etc, I’m guessing)

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      From a business perspective, this was the stupidest possible investment. There is no way Apple was going to let this fly.

      Why would you sink so much money into such a stupid product?

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        A lot of people seem to live in a delusional bubble where they don’t realize all the shitty things about apple products are by design.

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    What’s the point of even using iMessage when there’s so many better options for messaging.

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      “It’s installed by default and all my friends are on it” - 50% of Americans

      They don’t need to worry about the fact that the other half of Americans are not able to comfortably message them, or participate in group chats, because those are people poorer than them that they might not even want to interact with anyways. Some of them might even be not white.

      This becomes even more extreme as ages become younger, with around 98% of college age students and younger having iPhones (this is obviously biased to higher income colleges in metropolitian area but the data is still useful). The peer pressure of not having an iPhone is genuinely incredible (trust me, i experience it). I have genuinely had people stop wanting to be friends with me once they learned I had an Android phone.

      Apple has a monopoly so powerful that they influence the social circles of almost every grade schooler and college student in America. This is why they don’t want to give it up.

          • 𝚝𝚛𝚔@aussie.zone
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            I did get given a free iPhone! I opted not to use it.

            • Terrible email client options
            • Can’t rearrange your home screen beyond changing the icon order a bit
            • Firefox is just Safari with a groucho marx fake nose and glasses
            • Notifications are laughable by comparison
            • Share options are laughable by comparison
            • Camera is supposed to be better than any Android device ever invented, yet somehow managed to take blurry photos ~50% of the time so I’d end up taking 6 photos in every situation to make sure I got one where you could use it. I may be an edge case here as I’m mostly taking photos of name plates and technical documents where crisp detail is super important… iOS just wanted to make pretty colours and boke the world, even if it meant half a name plate was in focus and the back was artificially blurred for that sweet Instagram professional photographer look.
      • ThePowerOfGeek@lemmy.world
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        I have genuinely had people stop wanting to be friends with me once they learned I had an Android phone.

        Fuck those horrible people. They don’t deserve to be anyone’s friends with such a shitty attitude.

      • Serinus@lemmy.world
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        The peer pressure of not having an iPhone is genuinely incredible (trust me, i experience it).

        I wanna talk a bit about where this comes from. There are what, two or three models of iPhone that you can buy off the shelf right now?

        Think about grade school kids and their first phone. What do they get? Well, parents almost expect them to break the phone. If it’s an iPhone, then it’s one of the three, expensive models. If it’s an Android, it’s probably a cheap piece of shit (because on Android those are an option). It’s certainly not a Pixel or the latest Samsung.

        So grade school kids learn that iPhone = quality, and Android = cheap pieces of shit. And even if at the high end Android is better, young people by and large don’t experience that. And it sticks with them. Apple did a similar strategy with putting Apple computers into every grade school in the 1980s.

        And Apple is doing everything they can to reinforce this marketing and peer pressure, especially the iMessage thing. The only reason the iMessage “issue” exists is because Apple wants it to exist. They want the $700 cosmetic for chat to continue to exist. It’s a large part of their business model.

      • calypsopub@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        As an adult with Android, I can say this is real. I was on Safari in Africa and everybody else with me had iPhones. They were airdropping pictures to each other and I was reduced to begging for somebody to email them to me.

        • 𝚝𝚛𝚔@aussie.zone
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          1 year ago

          We were on a tour and the guide had an iPhone, but we have Android phones. He took some photos and said “Oh if you had an iPhone I could just Airdrop them to you” and we said “If you had an Android phone you could Nearby Share them to us”.

          Then there was much explaining about how Airdrop was better because it works with iPhones, and Nearby Share is no good because it won’t work with iPhones.

          Couldn’t quite get them to see the irony about that complaint.

    • DominusOfMegadeus@sh.itjust.works
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      I have never had an issue with messaging anyone in iMessage, regardless of what platform they are using. Serious question: is there something I am missing out on with iMessage that warrants investigating alternatives?

        • ThePowerOfGeek@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          That’s interesting about the reactions. I’m an Android (Pixel) user, and I swear when using the standard SMS app on my phone, from some iOS users I see their reactions as an emoji, while from others it does the “[user] liked your message” thing. Could it also be related to the version of iOS that’s being used on the other end?

        • Redredme@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          So… What your telling us is that it’s bad. Not good.

          because incompatible. It won’t work on any device. Except those of that cult. That cult whose leader killed himself after magically getting a a new liver somewhere in Asia.

          You know, donor organs for which there are waiting lists of months and months.

          Which was totally not weird and surely 100% legal and all. Just fine.

      • PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        If you don’t have a blue bubble on your friends phones, they will bully you until you take an AR-15 to school and kill everyone.

        Either that, or suicide. Blue bubbles are a leading cause of suicide among tweens and teens in the US.

      • Snekeyes@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I have Andriod and my wife’s got iPhone. IMessages don’t deliver… or deliver hours later. Images don’t make it… or make it xna they are potato.

        • jasondj@ttrpg.network
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          1 year ago

          You aren’t sending iMessages. You’re sending text messages, and vice versa. Old school SMS and MMS (from the days of the first cameraphones…the standard hasn’t changed much since then) are the best common language between your phones.

          Google/Android support RCS, the open modern protocol to replace SMS/MMS, and Apple is being sluggish to implement. Apple also supports iMessage, the default enhanced language to replace SMS/MMS, but that’s a closed protocol, and as such only supports Apple.

          Sent from wefwef for iOS, but I’d still say Apple are the assholes here. The only reason I even have a damn iPhone is because most of the people I exchange pictures/videos with, and the people they exchange pictures and video with, happen to use iPhones. So there’s no incentive for all of them to switch to a third-party platform for just me.

        • PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          My mom had the same problem. She has a 6 year old iPhone and sometimes my messages are delivered days after I send them. Happened a lot last year…

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    It appears that Beeper Mini, an easy iMessage solution for Android, was simply too good to be true — or a short-lived dream, at least.

    On Friday, less than a week after its launch, the app started experiencing technical issues when users were suddenly unable to send and receive blue bubble messages.

    Several people at The Verge were unable to activate their Android phone numbers with Beeper Mini as of Friday afternoon, a clear indication that Apple has plugged up whatever holes allowed the app to operate to begin with.

    The belief — or I suppose the hope — among Beeper’s developers and users was that it would be such an ordeal for Apple to block the Android app that doing so wouldn’t be worth the hassle.

    Previous attempts to get iMessage working on Android — like Beeper’s original app — have involved complex systems with remote Macs logged into a user’s Apple ID.

    Nothing, the startup from OnePlus co-founder Carl Pei, recently sought to bring iMessage to its latest phone, but that plan was quickly derailed by security and privacy concerns.


    The original article contains 450 words, the summary contains 182 words. Saved 60%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

    • db2@sopuli.xyz
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      This is the best summary I could come up with:


      Who fucking cares?


      The original article contains 450 words, the summary contains 3 words. I am not a bot.

      Edit: look at all the butthurt Apple fanboys.

  • Eggyhead@kbin.social
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    At the very least, hopefully Apple will notice that there is enough of an appetite for iMessage on Android that people are getting innovative about it.

    • Archer@lemmy.world
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      The point is to get people to buy iPhones because of getting shunned for green bubbles. It came out in litigation, the CEO straight up admitted it in writing

          • Eggyhead@kbin.social
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            That was an interesting read. There wasn’t actually any mention of green bubbles from Apple indicated in the article, but the emails referenced in a different article linked in that one quoted a top exec’s concern that adding iMessage to Android would only remove a barrier to parents buying their kids something other than an iPhone. The intent is pretty clear that they don’t want Android and iPhone users to be able communicate fairly in iMessage.

            Still, isn’t RCS support enough? I mean, assuming you simply refuse to just ask other people to download a different app?

            • Archer@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              From a technical POV, sure. For the average person if Apple doesn’t show RCS as blue bubble? They still won’t care, and will keep excluding people, and keep getting Apple phone sales

    • mwguy@infosec.pub
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      1 year ago

      Apple reportedly built a version of iMessages for Android a long time ago. Then they realized how many phones their bubble scheme sold and reversed course.

    • RGB3x3@lemmy.world
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      Why do people want iMessage for Android? That gives them more control over the entire messaging ecosystem.

      They’re adopting the RCS protocol, that’s what people should want. It’s interoperable with all phones and not just the ones that happen to support iMessage. It’s supposed to replace SMS and MMS, which are guaranteed to work between all platforms.

      This iMessage vs WhatsApp vs other walled-garden messaging apps debate is stupid when an open protocol is right there.

      • 𝒍𝒆𝒎𝒂𝒏𝒏@lemmy.one
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        They’re adopting the RCS protocol, that’s what people should want

        Standard RCS is not e2ee, only google’s implementation on top of it is. I feel most here would prefer an e2ee messaging protocol over something else that can be observed by third parties

        Samsung is the only other company that integrated Google’s e2ee implementation into their stock messages app fairly recently, it’s supported standard RCS for a good number of years now

    • Railcar8095@lemm.ee
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      What’s their motivation? Unless they charge for it, the other service to non customers and remove one of the barriers keeping people in iOS. I’ve read that EU won’t force it to open, so either there is profit involved or I don’t see apple doing it.