“When you use Signal, your data is stored in encrypted form on your devices. The only information that is stored on the Signal servers for each account is the phone number you registered with, the date and time you joined the service, and the date you last logged on.”
There isn’t any audit on whatsapp’s side. So you are trusting they are running the code they tell you they run on their servers.
So it’s not just about metadata, I wouldn’t trust facebook not to have some kind of access to the content of the messages. Which is much worse.
Also, Whatsapp is Facebook right ? Not really an amazing track record when it comes to privacy. They said they implemented the Signal protocol but you still have to trust them to be doing so.
I think that’s what the person you are responding to was essentially saying, we do not know for sure what Whatsapp does.
Well now you are really insinuating a conspiracy inside Facebook. That may be happening and that would be bad.
But I’m not talking about anything like that. I’m really only focusing on what Facebook openly says what WhatsApp is doing, and monetizing. And that’s exactly about the same data that we give Signal under the flag of open source and freedom. There’s no difference, except that in the case of WhatsApp I know the business model, and for signal I don’t.
I don’t pay for Signal servers, so who does?
That information is easily found with a web search, so there is no need to cast aspersions. It’s funded by Brian Acton’s “activist” funding (interest-free loans of $100 million+ total to Signal Foundation over the years). I’d guess Acton used it as a huge tax write-off the year he sold WhatsApp to Facebook.
Other revenue sources include voluntary user donations and grants from many free press organizations whose members rely on Signal. Some years they report positive net income, and other years they report negative.
Signal Foundation tax forms, which list all general revenue sources: https://projects.propublica.org/nonprofits/organizations/824506840
What Signal says about how they operate: https://signal.org/blog/signal-foundation/ https://signalfoundation.org/en/
Signal Privacy Policy: https://signal.org/legal/#privacy-policy
All the code, including what runs on their servers and in their apps, so you don’t need to take their word for anything. You can compile the signal client from source if you like: https://github.com/signalapp
Article which talks about their audit history (this is their weakest point. The full results of the audits Signal paid for were never published): https://restoreprivacy.com/secure-encrypted-messaging-apps/signal/
However, anybody can check for any spooky stuff in their code, so I doubt they would purposely try to hide anything untoward there.