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Comment by Nuzzerino

2 years ago

Don’t worry, telegram is now gatekeeping certain privacy settings behind the premium subscription like it’s 2003.

They also make it difficult to hide your pseudo identity from your phone contacts. I’ve had all the “discover contacts” settings turned off, and simply reinstalling the app caused people to be given my username without my consent. Settings somehow magically switched themselves back on and I couldn’t turn them off until after the damage was done.

There was no confirmation prompt. Pretty sure this happened to me more than once.

Please don’t ever compare Telegram with Signal.

i've been using Telegram on and off since 2015 or so, and i've never shared my contacts. never! re-installing Telegram has never changed that setting.

The real problem with cellphones is that a lot of privacy-threatening issues are literally one fat finger away. And clearly, that's a feature, not a bug. That's why I prefer to work and message on my laptop anyway.

but again, Telegram has been, in many practical ways, much more privacy-oriented than all the other messengers, exactly because you don't have to share your phone number to participate in groups and chats.

> telegram is now gatekeeping certain privacy settings behind the premium subscription

Such as?

  • For example, now you can’t restrict who can send you a message unless you have a premium. Also they added a “feature” that premium users can bypass non-premium users privacy setting “last seen and online” and TG will tell that info regardless of your choice unless you are premium too.

    • You're significantly misunderstanding the changes.

      > now you can’t restrict who can send you a message unless you have a premium.

      And before that you just weren't able to restrict that at all, there was no such feature. They didn't remove this feature for free users - it never existed. They just added it right now only for paid users.

      > premium users can bypass non-premium users privacy setting “last seen and online”

      That is absolutely not what the feature is. If you hide YOUR OWN last seen time, you won't be able to see last seen time of other users, even when they have it public. Now, premium users will be able to see public last seen times of other people if they hide their own. But they obviously still can't see last seen time of people who set it to private, that would've been very dumb.

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Come on signal until today had no way to keep the phone number private. Which is the topic here.

  • Because unlike Telegram they strive to do things in a privacy-respecting way, and that's hard to get right.

    • Wasn't the saying "perfect is the enemy of good"?

      While waiting to have it perfect you don't have it good either.

I don't get why people who are so paranoid about someone associating their Telegram handle with their phone number simply don't go and grab a burner SIM at Tesco.

I mean I'm all down with the idea of tech companies respecting our privacy. But here we are, complaining that corporations that are at least trying (and that are operating at a loss since their conception for our convenience) aren't giving us "Snowden hiding in Russia" level of security out of the box, for free, just because we deserve it. All while we could easily implement it ourselves for like $8 and with no online trace whatsoever.

It's like, Tails Linux exists, but FUCK GOOGLE for forcing me to Ctrl+Shift+Delete in Chrome if I want to erase a cookie. I'm so significant and certainly not a criminal, why do they hate me so much??

  • It's not always that simple. In many countries, like Brazil, you need a valid ID document to buy a SIM card, and the number is then and always linked to your government ID. This is the case for quite a few relatively free countries as a means to fraud prevention (not that it's particularly effective though).

  • > I don't get why people who are so paranoid about someone associating their Telegram handle with their phone number simply don't go and grab a burner SIM at Tesco.

    I could not hate the phone number requirement more, and it's one of the main reasons why I don't use these applications.

    With one exception: I have an overseas friend who only communicates through WhatsApp. For him, I did go out and get a burner phone for this purpose. But the friction level of doing that is unnecessarily high and I doubt I'd do it for anyone else.

  • I've tried 4 different sim cards in telegram. None of them seem to work. Not sure why a "privacy" app is asking for a phone number in the first place.

  • Ah, the good ol “just get a burner sim bro” argument. Tried that once, they did KYC.

    • I hadn’t used a burner in years, last year my phone broke on a trip and I just wanted to grab a phone, to get me through the week. I can say it’s not like it used to be! Can’t just grab one at the gas station and pop it in a phone. Gotta give ID, sign up for accounts, etc.

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