> > If the recipient can decrypt and authenticate your messages, you cannot >> have any guarantees around this. >> > > Actually you do - this is where the deniability inherent in Axolotl plays > a role. The recipient can authenticate the message, but no one else can. > From anyone else's perspective the message is just as likely fake as > real.
You missed the point: the intended use case was "If the recipient can decrypt and authenticate your messages" All that said: the sender can potentially provide a flag as to whether or not they would prefer a plaintext decrypt be displayed. This can't be enforced by cryptography, but Signal could attempt to honor such a flag. -- Tony Arcieri
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