I’ve been working hard on the privacy spreadsheet, which has been in development for over 150 hours now. Its been updated, and now includes more messaging apps and more data, with a better format. I’m still working on the sidebar issue, if anyone knows how to fix it, here’s the GitHub repo: https://github.com/du82/privacyspreadsheet.com
I’m aiming to make this the most valuable resource for privacy, beyond messaging as well, but one thing at a time.
No Molly, an independent Signal fork for Android, listing? Among other things, Molly handles data encryption at rest better and also has Tor support…which your spreadsheet doesn’t even list Tor support.
I can understand not wanting to including Molly due to it being only on Android (though I think/hope a lot of privacy enthusiasts run GrapheneOS on Pixels) even though it currently rides the Signal servers so in compatible with other Signal clients, but at least add Tor compatibility, please.
Is there no Google Sheets alternative that would allow to display it without having to download?
Also, there’s not a lot of value in placing it on GitHub if you can’t even preview the changes of a submitted pull request.
allow to display it without having to download?
I can view the site without having to download with the below link. So not sure what you mean?
https://privacyspreadsheet.com/messaging-apps
Edit: this is with Vanadium in incognito, if it matters.
Still using Google fonts for this spreadsheet ? Why ?
Fix your readme and give a use case for how to use this git repo
Still very biased towards Matrix Vs XMPP when it comes to encryption. If it is “provider specific” for XMPP it should be also “provider specific” for Matrix… or rather in 99% of the cases it is not “provider specific” at all but available and enabled by default for both. That there are a few non-compliant server+client combinations is just a result of an open-source and decentralized network.
Edit: same for the “what apps can hand over to police section”, which is also highly provider specific as it doesn’t really concern the “app” but rather the server (which can be self-hosted).