@.ilsi0: 🙇‍♂️#اصابه #CapCut

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Thursday 27 November 2025 21:44:43 GMT
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#chatcontrol #linuxserver #securemessaging #stopchatcontrol #cybersecuritytutorial @Benjamin Netanyahu - נתניהו  . Warning Ai generated text here: The main things you gain from hosting your own XMPP + OMEMO server are control, independence, and ownership. But there are trade-offs. What you gain 1. Your own messaging infrastructure * You control the server, accounts, and policies. * You are not dependent on Signal, WhatsApp, Telegram, or another company’s decisions. * You can create addresses like:     * alice@yourdomain.com     * bob@yourdomain.com 2. Decentralization * You can communicate with other XMPP users on other servers (if federation is enabled). * No single company controls the whole network. * Similar idea to email: Gmail users can email Proton users, etc. 3. Privacy from the service provider With OMEMO: * The server cannot read message contents. * A server operator (even you, if you host for others) only sees encrypted data and metadata. 4. Control over data retention You decide: * How long messages are stored * Whether backups exist * Who can create accounts * Whether logs are kept 5. Customization You can add: * Your own domain * Your own branding * Internal-only chat * Bots * Integrations * Automated accounts 6. A long-term open standard XMPP has existed for decades. You are not locked into one app: * Switch clients * Switch servers * Keep the same protocol ⸻ What you do not gain ❌ More privacy than Signal by default Signal already provides excellent end-to-end encryption. Running XMPP doesn’t magically make messages more private. ❌ A better user experience Signal is usually: * Easier to install * Better for non-technical users * More polished ❌ Anonymity Your server can still reveal metadata: * Who has an account * When people connect * Who communicates with whom (depending on configuration) ⸻ A simple analogy * Signal: You live in a secure apartment building managed by someone else. The locks are excellent, but you don’t own the building. * XMPP + OMEMO: You own the building. You choose the rules and maintenance—but you also have to maintain it. For one person, the benefit is mostly learning, control, and independence. For a family, community, company, or privacy-focused group, it can make much more sense.
#chatcontrol #linuxserver #securemessaging #stopchatcontrol #cybersecuritytutorial @Benjamin Netanyahu - נתניהו . Warning Ai generated text here: The main things you gain from hosting your own XMPP + OMEMO server are control, independence, and ownership. But there are trade-offs. What you gain 1. Your own messaging infrastructure * You control the server, accounts, and policies. * You are not dependent on Signal, WhatsApp, Telegram, or another company’s decisions. * You can create addresses like: * [email protected] * [email protected] 2. Decentralization * You can communicate with other XMPP users on other servers (if federation is enabled). * No single company controls the whole network. * Similar idea to email: Gmail users can email Proton users, etc. 3. Privacy from the service provider With OMEMO: * The server cannot read message contents. * A server operator (even you, if you host for others) only sees encrypted data and metadata. 4. Control over data retention You decide: * How long messages are stored * Whether backups exist * Who can create accounts * Whether logs are kept 5. Customization You can add: * Your own domain * Your own branding * Internal-only chat * Bots * Integrations * Automated accounts 6. A long-term open standard XMPP has existed for decades. You are not locked into one app: * Switch clients * Switch servers * Keep the same protocol ⸻ What you do not gain ❌ More privacy than Signal by default Signal already provides excellent end-to-end encryption. Running XMPP doesn’t magically make messages more private. ❌ A better user experience Signal is usually: * Easier to install * Better for non-technical users * More polished ❌ Anonymity Your server can still reveal metadata: * Who has an account * When people connect * Who communicates with whom (depending on configuration) ⸻ A simple analogy * Signal: You live in a secure apartment building managed by someone else. The locks are excellent, but you don’t own the building. * XMPP + OMEMO: You own the building. You choose the rules and maintenance—but you also have to maintain it. For one person, the benefit is mostly learning, control, and independence. For a family, community, company, or privacy-focused group, it can make much more sense.

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