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  • ✇Android Authority
  • Sunbird, an insecure app that’s never worked properly, will likely cost you $1.99 each monthC. Scott Brown
    Credit: C. Scott Brown / Android Authority The much-maligned app Sunbird is now telling some users that it will be charging $1.99 each month for the service. This is a bold move, considering the security problems the app has faced in the past, as well as the company’s history of over-promising and under-delivering. With iPhones getting RCS support soon anyway, what is Sunbird really offering? The Sunbird story just keeps getting stranger. The app — which promises to bring iMessage featu
     

Sunbird, an insecure app that’s never worked properly, will likely cost you $1.99 each month

20. Červen 2024 v 18:08

Sunbird Messaging App Webpage

Credit: C. Scott Brown / Android Authority

  • The much-maligned app Sunbird is now telling some users that it will be charging $1.99 each month for the service.
  • This is a bold move, considering the security problems the app has faced in the past, as well as the company’s history of over-promising and under-delivering.
  • With iPhones getting RCS support soon anyway, what is Sunbird really offering?


The Sunbird story just keeps getting stranger. The app — which promises to bring iMessage features to Android by bridging the two ecosystems through a macOS device — came back recently after taking a hiatus last year when it was revealed to be an absolute nightmare for privacy and security. Although we still haven’t seen anyone actually gain access to the “new” Sunbird, we have seen some new information related to it.

Thanks to Reddit posts first spotted by 9to5Google, some users are reporting receiving an email that says Sunbird will soon have a monthly fee. At $1.99 each month, Sunbird isn’t asking for much. However, the app has always been free, and the company’s early promotional material touted this as a major aspect of its appeal. At some point recently, though, Sunbird quietly altered this, with one 9to5Google reader pointing out that the company’s FAQ on its website now says this:

Sunbird will not remain a free product for unlimited messaging. Over the coming months we will test subscription types and payment options.

As recently as March this year, though, Sunbird’s site said this in response to the same FAQ:

Sunbird will be free for the foreseeable future, that’s the bottom line. We don’t have any reason to turn on paid subscriptions right now based on our current goal. Right now we have one goal in mind to give iMessage on Android to millions of users. Let’s connect the world first!

So, clearly, something has changed at Sunbird as far as its financial goals are concerned.

Regardless, it seems quite bizarre for the company to double down like this. First, it has a massive amount of ill will and doubt to overcome after the Nothing Chats debacle last year. Second, Sunbird still hasn’t adequately proven that it’s solved all (or even some) of the privacy and security problems we’ve seen from it. Third, at no point has Sunbird proven that the app actually works well enough to use as a daily messaging service, let alone one that is worth paying for. Fourth, even in this most recent email to users, Sunbird openly admits that there are significant problems with the app, including that “new Apple IDs may have a brief 30-60 minute warming up period,” “all playable audio formats cause the app to crash,” and “outgoing attachments may be duplicated on the receiver’s end sporadically,” to name a few. Fifth, and most importantly, iPhones will receive RCS support very soon, which will not solve the “green bubble” issue Android users face when communicating with iPhone users but will make any app that does what Sunbird does immediately less enticing. In other words, for the company to already be planning a subscription model, it is very much putting the cart before the horse.

As we’ve said before, multiple members of the Android Authority team are on the Sunbird waitlist. Once we gain access to the “new” app, we’ll report back to you.

  • ✇Android Authority
  • iOS 18 rumored to bring new ways to jazz up your text conversationsRushil Agrawal
    Credit: Edgar Cervantes / Android Authority iMessage on iOS 18 will reportedly introduce a new text effects feature. This would work separately from the bubble and full-screen effects that iMessage already has. Apple’s much-anticipated Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) 2024 is just around the corner, ready to kick off on June 10. The real showstopper this year is expected to be iOS 18, which is predicted to be one of the most significant updates in iPhone history. Apple has already
     

iOS 18 rumored to bring new ways to jazz up your text conversations

31. Květen 2024 v 19:33
Apple iMessages on iPhone stock photo 3
Credit: Edgar Cervantes / Android Authority
  • iMessage on iOS 18 will reportedly introduce a new text effects feature.
  • This would work separately from the bubble and full-screen effects that iMessage already has.

Apple’s much-anticipated Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) 2024 is just around the corner, ready to kick off on June 10. The real showstopper this year is expected to be iOS 18, which is predicted to be one of the most significant updates in iPhone history.

Apple has already teased new AI features that are coming to its platforms, generating considerable excitement. According to MacRumors, Apple also plans to enhance the iMessage experience in iOS 18 with a new text effects feature.

  • ✇XDA
  • How to use iMessage on Android using BlueBubblesBrady Snyder
    Following multiple high-profile attempts by Beeper and Sunbird to get iMessage working on Android, there's more interest in the possibility now than ever before. Of course, that's because iMessage is one of the best messaging apps out there, but it is limited to Apple devices. Beeper somehow managed to reverse-engineer iMessage with Beeper Mini, but that was quickly shut down. Now, even Beeper Cloud doesn't support iMessage natively, instead choosing to list it as an experimental fea
     

How to use iMessage on Android using BlueBubbles

11. Květen 2024 v 23:30

Following multiple high-profile attempts by Beeper and Sunbird to get iMessage working on Android, there's more interest in the possibility now than ever before. Of course, that's because iMessage is one of the best messaging apps out there, but it is limited to Apple devices. Beeper somehow managed to reverse-engineer iMessage with Beeper Mini, but that was quickly shut down. Now, even Beeper Cloud doesn't support iMessage natively, instead choosing to list it as an experimental feature. But there are other ways to get iMessage on Android, and one of them is BlueBubbles.

  • ✇Android Authority
  • Apple buffs up iMessage security with quantum computer-proof encryptionRyan McNeal
    Credit: Dhruv Bhutani / Android Authority Apple is creating a new form of encryption for iMessage. This new layer of encryption aims to prevent harvest now, decrypt later attacks. Today’s encryption is good enough to defend against most encryption cracking attempts. But will today’s encryption hold up when pitted against more powerful computers in the future? Apple is not waiting to find out and is updating the security protocol for its messaging app to handle attacks from quantum compu
     

Apple buffs up iMessage security with quantum computer-proof encryption

21. Únor 2024 v 21:30
iMessage on an Android phone
Credit: Dhruv Bhutani / Android Authority
  • Apple is creating a new form of encryption for iMessage.
  • This new layer of encryption aims to prevent harvest now, decrypt later attacks.

Today’s encryption is good enough to defend against most encryption cracking attempts. But will today’s encryption hold up when pitted against more powerful computers in the future? Apple is not waiting to find out and is updating the security protocol for its messaging app to handle attacks from quantum computers.

According to Bloomberg, Apple is introducing a new form of encryption meant for iMessage called PQ3 cryptographic protocol. This new encryption layer will work alongside the company’s existing encryption tools.

  • ✇Ars Technica - All content
  • iMessage gets a major makeover that puts it on equal footing with SignalDan Goodin
    Enlarge (credit: Getty Images) iMessage is getting a major makeover that makes it among the two messaging apps most prepared to withstand the coming advent of quantum computing, largely at parity with Signal or arguably incrementally more hardened. On Wednesday, Apple said messages sent through iMessage will now be protected by two forms of end-to-end encryption (E2EE), whereas before, it had only one. The encryption being added, known as PQ3, is an implementation of a new al
     

iMessage gets a major makeover that puts it on equal footing with Signal

22. Únor 2024 v 01:37
Stylized illustration of key.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

iMessage is getting a major makeover that makes it among the two messaging apps most prepared to withstand the coming advent of quantum computing, largely at parity with Signal or arguably incrementally more hardened.

On Wednesday, Apple said messages sent through iMessage will now be protected by two forms of end-to-end encryption (E2EE), whereas before, it had only one. The encryption being added, known as PQ3, is an implementation of a new algorithm called Kyber that, unlike the algorithms iMessage has used until now, can’t be broken with quantum computing. Apple isn’t replacing the older quantum-vulnerable algorithm with PQ3—it's augmenting it. That means, for the encryption to be broken, an attacker will have to crack both.

Making E2EE future safe

The iMessage changes come five months after the Signal Foundation, maker of the Signal Protocol that encrypts messages sent by more than a billion people, updated the open standard so that it, too, is ready for post-quantum computing (PQC). Just like Apple, Signal added Kyber to X3DH, the algorithm it was using previously. Together, they’re known as PQXDH.

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