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Content
@
https://warpcast.com/~/channel/sovereignty
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comm intern pfp
comm intern
@comm.eth
some fun facts: - every email provider (even protonmail) can read your emails unless they’re encrypted using pgp (you probs aren’t using it) - telegram chats, discord DMs and warpcast DMs are marketed as private but aren’t since they’re not e2ee. - a reputable open-source e2ee messenger is the best way to ensure private communications stay private (outside of whispering sentences into your friend’s ear).
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Monteluna pfp
Monteluna
@monteluna
I think the biggest issue with private comms is most people don't use it, because they think you're weird if you want privacy (what are you trying to hide?) I do believe there's an opportunity to sell these to normies with deep crypto integration, and market it as a way to stop companies selling your data. It's not that Google can read your emails, but it's that they are using it to train their marketing algorithms and make more money off your communications, without giving you a cut. This probably resonates with people more than "hey, they can read your emails".
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Monteluna pfp
Monteluna
@monteluna
P.S., I am paying attention to Comm, but I just listened to a podcast with Tether's CEO and they are going to be making a larger push out for Keet, and he also hinted a possible deeper integration with a Tether L2/L1 in the future. Between Comm, Keet, Status, and XMTP, there's going to be a host of really interesting technologies around private communications, and the selling point is just P2P crypto transactions.
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comm intern
@comm.eth
1. people don't use e2ee messengers bc they have worse UX. shitty search, no cloud backups, confusing UI, etc. are features they take for granted on telegram, discord, etc. 2. people don't use social apps that their friends don't use. that's why new social apps these days start by asking you to import your contacts and share it with friends. 3. drawing awareness to surveillance and the end of privacy is crucial. we went from stranger danger to putting our entire lives online in a decade and it's weird and jarring to people that we're never going back. the younger generations have forgotten it entirely, but they'll embrace it once the ux catches up and their friends are on it (see: snapchat). also note all the points murtaza mentions - there's demand, it's just that building the product is hard. luckily our team is cracked.
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