48 points
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I never expected that they’d put generative AI in WhatsApp, like, why???
It’s one of those things that everyone will be crazy about for a week and then… poof, it will just become irrelevant, because it doesn’t really add anything substantial to what the chat app is already good for: chatting with our fellow humans.
Maybe it’s Zucc’s way to get us acquainted with treating bots like humans, so one day he can finally come out as a robot and be accepted by the wider society

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21 points

I never expected that they’d put generative AI in WhatsApp, like, why???

it doesn’t really add anything substantial to what the chat app is already good for: chatting with our fellow humans.

A lot of this is for WhatsApp Business. Meta are monetising WhatsApp. The idea is that businesses will use WhatsApp Business and the shitty AI features to (direct from their website): “Engage audiences, accelerate sales and drive better customer support outcomes on the platform with more than 2 billion users around the world.”

What a cringe :(

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5 points

Hmm, that makes a little bit more sense, but yes, still cringe corporate move trying to monetize on the AI craze

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I’m not sure the robots want him, either.

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7 points

It’s not about what people want, it’s about what them want people to use.

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7 points

Unnecessary feature bloat, that’s what it is.

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3 points
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Deleted by creator
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2 points

Snapchat did it. Meta needs to do it, too.

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1 point

Some people are crazy about sites like Character.ai, and people were using chatgpt as their own therapist when it first came out. There’s an audience for these types of chatbots

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40 points

Why would you use WhatsApp in the first place?

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43 points

It is basically the default in most latam countries.

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32 points

Many Asia countries too, probably Europe too.

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21 points
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Africa and the middle east as well

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21 points
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If you meet someone new they may essentially force you to (through lack of other options), if you wish to communicate with them

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-11 points

In this case one of two parties must join a new platform. Either they join a privacy respecting one or they can call/text. If they can’t respect that boundary further communication will not be required.

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Avatar
ink@r.nf
7 points

no wonder you’re on here so much.

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17 points

Many countries like the UK charge 35p for an MMS. So to send pictures to anyone you needed an internet connected messenger.

SMS/MMS effectively died here.

So if I want to communicate everyone uses WhatsApp or iMessage

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7 points

And most importantly, SMS is not secure [1].

[1] https://proton.me/blog/stop-using-sms

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5 points

I love proton but I’d rather use SMS every damn day than WhatsApp

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7 points

It doesn’t matter what you or I want if people are on WhatsApp, and you want to talk to them, you have to use it.

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2 points

You can always use SMS or email, every user has access to one of those services, they just aren’t as quick or convenient as data mining shit-apps.

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2 points

they just aren’t as quick or convenient

Yeah because that’s not at all important in communicating with the general population

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0 points

Problem is people expect a much richer media experience than SMS.

It would be really weird to SMS some to say oh check your emails I sent you a cool meme.

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4 points
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Removed by mod
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27 points

This is why proprietary messaging solutions are bad for both freedom and privacy. You are stuck with antifeatures and you have no way of truely verifying privacy

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25 points

End-to-end encryption is the best possible safeguard against Meta snooping on your data.

This has always been my biggest pet peeve with WhatsApp. Yes, they might encrypt it all and the encryption might be practically unbreakable, but what worries me is what Meta might do with the private encryption keys. Lem me elaborate further.

I’ll start by trying to explain how key-based encryption, the type of encryption WhatsApp uses, work at their core, for those who don’t know (THIS IS GOING TO BE AN OVERSIMPLIFICATION). Imagine you want a friend to send you a message with super sensitive contents. Here’s what you do to guarantee that no one else can read it but you:

  • First, you generate two keys, which are pretty much two really big numbers. One will be called the public key and the other one will be the private key.
  • Then, you go to the person who wants to send you stuff and say “Hey John, remember that really important message you wanted to send me? Take my public key and make sure you cypher your message using it”.
  • Once you receive the message, you decypher it using the private key. Using the private key is the only way you can read this message. You can’t use the public key for it because it won’t work.

This means that, if someone else manages to get the encrypted message, they will need the private key to read what it says, but they don’t have it, only you have it. The only thing they can do keep guessing what that key is until they find what it was and read the message, but that can take up to millions of years, even using supercomputers.

As you can see, this works really well for sending messages without anyone but the sender and the reciever knowing what is being said, and that’s why it’s so used in encrypted message apps…

…but what if Meta has access to the private keys? I mean, what if, after WhatsApp creating the public and private keys for messaging, the private key is retrieved and stored in Meta’s servers, making them able to read all the messages you receive?

Can someone with more experience in the subject say if my concerns are valid?

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7 points

I think that would just be illegal, although I am not certain… maybe it’s not

What I’d be more worried about personally is metadata. Sure, they might not know what you sent, but they know who you sent it to and when. The data is generally just gonna be “Oh, this person texts their mum every morning”, but Meta already provided message contents in an abortion case, so what if someone is accused of having an abortion (the fact that you can be “accused” of that now in the US is still fucked up imo, but that’s besides the point) and then Meta provides info that this teenager sent WhatsApp messages to a medical professional who can perform abortions. That would obviously not work as well as the contents themselves, but it does have value to the legal case.

In the end none of us have anything to hide… until we suddenly do

I know this wasn’t argued here, but I’d like to make it clear anyways: You don’t have to deal drugs or be a hired killer to want privacy. There are a bunch of reasons you could get in trouble with the government which fall into morally ambiguous areas. And sometimes we just don’t want our entire life being analyzed to have an algorithm decide what advertisement is the most effective in getting us to click on it.

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7 points

I have never believed Facebook when they’ve said they don’t have the ability to see your messages. There’s no proof of that whatsoever. And it’s fucking FACEBOOK.

I would be SHOCKED if they didn’t have access to private keys.

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4 points

I share that concern and would not rely on my messaging being secure. Anyways as far as they state it themself, your private key for decrypting should stay on your device (in fact it uses the signal protocol and does a few more steps, e.g. to implement shared sessions over multiple devices. You can have a look at their FAQ, they’ve linked a white paper within it describing the technical details). But the main question is in my opinion: do you trust the guarantees they give you? It’s the same struggle as with any proprietary software. You can trust them or you don’t, but you will never know without access to the source code.

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3 points

What do you mean, might? The keys will be stolen and sold to the highest bidder on the black market, probably to state surveillance organizations.

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20 points

That’s a lost fight, at least in my circle and in my circles’s circles. It was already difficult to move some of them to Signal and Telegram but even then, they kept using Whatsapp.

It should be managed at nation /European Union level, they should forbid this shit.

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-23 points

Signal is a bad app, you still cannot long press to select multiple photos. You have to select one and then press the add more button, open up a different gallery view and select multiple from there. But they add emojis and remove SMS support so woo. 😞

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6 points
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And this makes it a bad app? Slight inconvenience and some less emojis? You’re right that it needs improvement, but I’ll happily accept this in exchange for not just another stupid big-tech company snooping around my personal stuff. I’m so fucking pissed at the constant privacy attacks from these evil ass holes

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-4 points

Yeah that makes it a bad app, they removed a huge feature that makes it difficult to get less privacy conscious people over to it and it is focused on gimmicky features instead of.qualoty of life improvement. It is annoying to be missing easily implementable features that would not impact privacy.

I still use it for the better part of a decade but I think it is a bad app for what it is trying to do.

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6 points
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Write the code and make a pull request. If you can’t, at least open an issue and let them know.

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2 points

I have provided feedback for this and another issue and never once have I received anything back or seen a change.

To be honest the feature I’m talking about should be recognised by their team as missing and shouldn’t need an email but I did nonetheless.

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Privacy

!privacy@lemmy.ml

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A place to discuss privacy and freedom in the digital world.

Privacy has become a very important issue in modern society, with companies and governments constantly abusing their power, more and more people are waking up to the importance of digital privacy.

In this community everyone is welcome to post links and discuss topics related to privacy.

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