“The Electronic Frontier Foundation or EFF, a non-profit digital rights group, has investigated the security of various messaging apps and created a new Secure Messaging Scorecard, ranking messaging apps and tools like iMessage, FaceTime, BlackBerry Messenger, Skype, Snapchat, and more, based on seven different factors” Juli Clover reports for MacRumors.
“Apple’s iMessage scored five out of seven checkmarks, earning points for encrypting messages in transit and encryption that’s unreadable by Apple, but the messaging app was faulted for an inability to verify contact identities and the fact that Apple’s code is not open to independent review,” Clover reports. “FaceTime was scored in the same way as iMessage, also offering encryption but no contact verification/independent review capabilities. Outside of dedicated secure chat messaging apps, both FaceTime and iMessage scored higher than competing messaging platforms like Skype, WhatsApp, Viber, Snapchat, Kik, Google Hangouts, and BlackBerry Messenger.”
Clover reports, “According to the EFF, Apple’s iMessage and FaceTime products were the ‘best of the mass-market options,’ which is not much of a surprise given Apple’s unparalleled focus on user privacy.”
Read more in the full article here.
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