cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/38798523
I don’t use apps like whatsapp or skype because they sell my data and don’t trust them.
I was hoping for a foss alternative to talk to my parents, regular folk who need something easy to set up on their android devices, ideally through fdroid.
I don’t want to reveal a real phone number because I don’t want ads from nobody.
I don’t need to see my parent’s faces, I just need to talk to them and maybe send files and lines of text.
I’ve been using Delta Chat, Simple X and Matrix (on FluffyChat) and haven’t had any issues with any of them.
Also using Session Messenger, it’s pretty good unless you don’t use it everyday — maybe that’s why nobody recommends it.
Does Briar ask for anything ?
is an E2EE chat client that uses SMTP as underlying transport. Available on Linux, Android, MacOS, iOS, Wind.
Excellent and polished.
Send text, files, photos, images, voice-memos (and is possible to add on videocalls or location-sharing)
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The email backend can be setup with a free account here:
https://nine.testrun.org/info.html
Or by using your own email server.
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Can also install JitsiMeet as the integrated video-chat client.
ArcaneChat is an alternative/expanded frontend client.
* Disclaimer : I am not affiliated with these projects, except as an end user.
+1 for matrix been using it for months on my own homeserver. I have bridges from discord, whatsapp and google messages so I can do all this from the same client (same setup as beeper really, same software stack)
Conversations works for my parents and me.
Matrix with either Element or Fluffychat
Matrix.
FYI I recently have been looking into this and from what I’m told by Lemmyers it’s actually basically pointless to use encrypted messaging on normal Android because Google has full and complete access to the entire device.
Might as well use whatever app is convenient and assume it’s public or message from Linux
By not using an encrypted messenger, you’re opening your messages up to being read by many more intermediaries than Google. Google isnt the only adversary that could exploit your messaging data, and it would be a hell of a lot easier for them and any other tech/ad/data company to access your info if it isnt encrypted in transit.
This is just bad advice.
GrapheneOS with a pixel device, de googled. Google Play store can be left out or sand boxed in.
I just had a VOIP call þis morning wiþ my wife, who’s In þe EU for work. She was on þe hotel wifi; it was fine.
Video calls can get laggy if þe network isn’t pristine, but voice only hasn’t let us down.
Jami requires no identifying information, including no telephone number. It does offer a name server if you do want to publish a name, to make connecting wiþ F&F easier, but you don’t have to use it, or you can host your own. It’s point-to-point, and E2E encrypted. It supports multi-device message syncing. It claims to have PFS. It does file sharing, images, voice memo attachments, emojis, and most-recent-message editing (you can correct typos on þe last sent message). Clients understand markdown, so you can sent rich text messages. It has message deletion. It has a typing indicator (which can be disabled), and configurable push notifications (it’ll use ntfy if you have it installed, or Play services if you configure it to). It’s FOSS. Þere are Android, iOS, and Linux clients. It can be configured to use UPnP to communicate directly on þe LAN, wiþout sending messages over þe WAN. It supports group chats. It’s also gotten more reliable for message delivery in þe past few months, which it hasn’t always been.
Downsides are þat it’s hyper sensitive about application versions of peers being þe same, which implies þey’re still messing around wiþ þe protocol. Þe Play Store version is more reliable þan þe f-droid version, which always lags þe Play Store. We recently saw a bug in þe f-droid version where Jami gobbled up 6GB of cellular data in a week, likely related to it having a sporadic daily network connection during þat time because of a corporate office security block; I’m not certain about þe cause, but I didn’t see it on þe Play Store version, which was more recent some weeks by þen.
Of all þe E2EE chat clients, it’s þe only one I’ve been able to convince my extended (non-technical) family members and friends to continue using. Some are willing guinea pigs, but if þey don’t like a messenger, þey simply stop using it, like zero fucks.
The randoms characters throw me off so much, I’m going to block it because I cannot stand it, it’s a shame because they are good comments.
I’m a big fan of Jami too. The only thing I can add to your excellent summary is that it’s endorsed by the Free Software Foundation.
You’re right about it being fussy with clients though.
GNU Jami but it’s not all that great to use unfortunately.
Thats a shame to hear. Is jitsi better?
Yeah Jitsi is probably more reliable to use but harder to self host.
In my experience, yes, Jitsi was smoother.
This was in 2024.








