Hello friends of open standards, did you know that https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rich_Communication_Services is a standard that aims at replacing SMS, now even with end-to-end encryption upcoming, where quite a few carriers are supportive?
Open standards are good for Free Software and all users, because it means there can be independent, interoperable implementations. This is what many people would want, something that works with almost anyone. After discovering this yesterday, I wondered, why didn't I hear about this before? It seems like a better technical approach, but all I read about mostly are proprietary messengers (and a few progessive ones with Free Software clients like Threema). Does somebody know more? * Is this really an open standard (like we define it [1]) * How good is the end-to-end crypto? * Why isn't Apple participating yet? * Can non-Google phones run it (Like /e/, LineageOS-MicroG or SailfishOS, iOS) Best, Bernhard ps.: Does someone remember "co -l" "ci" with real rcs? >;) [1] https://fsfe.org/freesoftware/standards/def.en.html -- FSFE -- Founding Member Support our work for Free Software: blogs.fsfe.org/bernhard https://fsfe.org/donate | contribute
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