Comment by WolfeReader
2 years ago
Signal is known to store two points of data per (hashed) phone number: the first login date, and the most recent login date. The second point is sufficient to get a user count.
2 years ago
Signal is known to store two points of data per (hashed) phone number: the first login date, and the most recent login date. The second point is sufficient to get a user count.
Having a "most recent login" doesn't prove someone is an active user. I use it about once every two days, am I also an active users? Compare that to WhatsApp which most people use multiple times a day or even multiple times per hour, and you get the picture of how popular or lack thereof Signal is by comparison.
Like I said, a lot of people have Signal, but very few use it as their primary messenger on a regular basis, and more of a "it's just there in case one of those tech nerds who told me to install it decided to message me on"
"I use it about once every two days, am I also an active users?"
Yes. I think your definition of "active user" is non-standard.
Is it? My definition of active, is "do you use Signal as your main messenger or in that ballpark".
If you only use it a couple of times per week you're not really an active users when messenger apps on average get used multiple times per day.
So I don't think I;[m unreasonable at all to compare Signal to the average messaging apps in term of screen time.
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