Doesn't exist, sorry.
Has to do with how RCS works. It's a crappy "protocol" that's bound to hardware and software like Google Messages.
Best to move on from it - it's was born dead on the vine.
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Doesn't exist, sorry.
Has to do with how RCS works. It's a crappy "protocol" that's bound to hardware and software like Google Messages.
Best to move on from it - it's was born dead on the vine.
Isn't it also - at least in practice - bound to Google servers?
As of last year Google was still the only real provider for RCS and its "encryption" was completely transparent to them. I'm currently using Deku SMS for normal texting (icky) and agree with the other comments recommending Signal as an actually usable modern messaging service
Why isn't anyone recommending Signal? That's also using RCS, no? Or maybe just E2EE?
Edit: nvm, it's its own protocol for E2EE. probably better that way anyway. I've got several group chats that all use RCS, but that sounds like it's TLS encryption and likely not encrypted on the servers where it could still be carrier accessed. I'll have to look into it more
Worse, RCS isn't always E2EE. After Apple begrudgingly added it to iMessage, they've made sure that iPhones don't support its encryption, and I don't think they display reactions and such properly. Meaning a group chat with a single iPhone in it can't be encrypted.
That and the annoying dependence on carrier and proprietary software support - even with google messenger I've had RCS just give up sometimes and go to SMS only.
At this point, using an actual E2EE messaging system like Signal makes a lot more sense.
your best bet (for now) is using an existing alternative what you want is "cross-platform + decentralized + E2EE"
there are several options, for example: matrix, delta chat, and XMPP
people will reccomend signal, it's centralized, don't use it
yea, it's not really a thing - I looked into it about half a year ago.
RCS needs infrastructure and such that google usually provides. teleproviders can choose between building it themselves or letting people use google/apple infrastructure. soo, it's kinda stuck at that it seems like.
At least as far as I've understood.