return to table of content

Apple partly halts Beeper's iMessage app again, suggesting a long fight ahead

rezonant
109 replies
6d16h

I think this is kinda technically a win for Beeper. I would've expected another 100% lockout to be Apple's priority. They were instead only able to block 5%, which sounds like a heuristic being applied, and possibly not even an intentional block of Beeper (in the sense that some anti-spam service may be identifying some Beeper users).

They can certainly escalate with protocol changes, but they still have to contend with older Macs, iPhones and iPads which are out of the support window losing access-- so if they want to update the protocol they either have to issue out of band patches for these devices or cut them off too.

This is assuming you can actually iMessage on iDevices that are out of software support -- maybe our iOS friends can let us know.

EDIT: This take seems more plausible (that this is intentional by Apple): https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38648030

zem
44 replies
6d13h

i believe that thus far it's a win for apple - all they need to do is introduce the perception that beeper is not 100% reliable, which is the kiss of death for something as potentially important as a messaging service.

vintermann
41 replies
6d11h

Oh no, if the alternative is getting rid of your Android phone and go buy an iPhone, it needs to be a lot worse than that.

zem
40 replies
6d11h

the alternative is just continuing to sms people from your android because at least you know the messages are definitely going through, green bubble or not

vintermann
31 replies
6d11h

You still face such problems as being left out of group chats.

StressedDev
29 replies
6d10h

Is this really a problem? I seriously doubt many people are going to leave someone out because they use an Android phone. I certainly won't because I like communicating with people and people are far more important than technology.

vintermann
24 replies
6d10h

That's nice of you, but by all accounts from the US (where iphone is dominant): Yes, it's a problem. The visual marking and decreased integration/service towards users of non-iphones is pretty obviously part of why Apple has such a big phone market share in the US - if not, they wouldn't fight tooth and nail to keep those anti-features. There's plenty of examples of Apple being quite open and friendly to integration when it benefits them, and here they aren't, so it isn't.

Twisell
11 replies
6d10h

Well in Europe Android is dominating the market (but with a very fragmented experience depending on Android version).

The result is that as an iPhone users I feel sometimes feel left out because different friends circles on Android turn to different secured messaging services (WhatsApp, FB messenger, Telegram, Signal, etc...).

I firmly refuse to give my personal ID to all theses companies just to keep in touch so I often default to sms/mail (or I get left out of group chat).

iMessage is not perfect but they did get the sms fallback right and with upcoming RCS support maybe it'll be easier to bypass theses competing closed and incompatible walled gardens.

So from my point of view, the whole "blue bubble" tyranny look like a joke. Apple kept conformance with SMS/MMS standards from the beginning and added a secure layer on top. I wish others services just did the same.

vintermann
3 replies
6d8h

I can understand not trusting FB, but you have to give out the ID you want people to be able to find you by. What you give to Signal is probably less than what's in the phone directory.

I wish others services just did the same.

Signal did, then someone convinced them that the risk of accidentally sending an SMS which you thought were an encrypted message, was bad enough to break messaging integration on Android.

I wonder if whoever convinced them of that maybe didn't want it to be so convenient to use.

whyoh
2 replies
6d7h

Signal is strongly focused on secure communication, so it never made any sense for it to support SMS/MMS.

I think bundling different protocols in the same app is a bad idea in general. Besides the security and functionality problems, it just creates confusion. The whole iMessage/bubble-color mess wouldn't exist if Apple made it clear to their users that the iMessage protocol is different from SMS and incompatible with most phones.

vintermann
1 replies
6d4h

Well imessage does the exact same thing. It doesn't seem to confuse the users. More basic protocols as a fallback mechanism can be a good idea, if you understand the risks (and of course, if you allow the recipient to use the better protocol!)

Signal always warned me very clearly if it was forced to send a message via SMS, and even pushed me to invite the recipient to Signal. It made sense to support it still, because it's the second most basic service in the Android world (after calls), and now that Signal doesn't offer it, it can't be the default service any longer.

Signal's task as I see it isn't just to protect your communication, but encourage widespread use of strong encryption so that you don't stand out for using it. For that, there are tradeoffs. I think being able to handle the forced insecure communication for the user, clearly marked as such, was a great tradeoff for the sake of wider adoption.

whyoh
0 replies
6d3h

Well imessage does the exact same thing. It doesn't seem to confuse the users.

What % of iPhone users do you think understand the difference between SMS, MMS and iMessage protocols? I bet most don't. But if iMessage had its own separate app, they would know it's an Apple-only protocol. And that would make them less likely to exclude non-iPhone users and more likely to use cross-platform alternatives. It's not like all iPhone are jerks, they're being mislead on how "texting" in the default iPhone app really works. That's what I meant by confusion.

whyoh
2 replies
6d8h

Apple kept conformance with SMS/MMS standards from the beginning and added a secure layer on top.

iMessage is not a "secure layer on top", it's a totally separate proprietary protocol and it requires an Apple account to work. It just happens to run in the same app as SMS/MMS messages, which has its pros and cons.

spectre3d
0 replies
4d

it requires an Apple account to work

Not true.

“The “magic” is that you don’t have to sign up for an account, or create a new username or account identifier. You just send a message from your phone number to another phone number, and if both numbers are registered for iMessage, the message goes over iMessage instead of SMS, even if you don’t have an Apple ID. Beeper had that working last week. Now, Beeper users need to have an Apple ID, and sign into that Apple ID within Beeper. (Beeper should actively encourage users to create and use an app-specific Apple ID password[1] for Beeper.)”[2]

[1] https://support.apple.com/en-us/102654

[2] https://daringfireball.net/2023/12/beeper_mini_is_back

curt15
0 replies
6d5h

This. A "secure layer on top" would be something more like HTTPS over HTTP.

Zak
2 replies
6d6h

as an iPhone users I feel sometimes feel left out because... I firmly refuse to give my personal ID to all theses companies just to keep in touch

You're not left out because of what kind of phone you use. You're left out because you refuse to use messaging apps that are available for your phone.

joshmanders
1 replies
6d3h

And yet here we are, in a thread about a service abusing Apple's servers to make something available to the opposite crowd who feels left out because they refuse to use messaging apps that are available for their phones.

Volundr
0 replies
6d1h

Look I think Beeper Mini and the whole thing is silly, but no, Android users are not refusing to use the apps available for their phones. iMessage is not available for Android.

lostlogin
0 replies
6d9h

iMessage is not perfect but they did get the sms fallback right

Did they though? It’s unreliable.

Other than this point, I very much share your position.

Grustaf
11 replies
6d8h

It’s not just about market share. In Scandinavia about 90% of middle class people use iphones, but this whole blue-green bubble nonsense is a total non-issue. We have group chats in whatsapp, fb messages or sms, nobody cares.

vintermann
4 replies
6d8h

In Scandinavia about 90% of middle class people use iphones

Whoa, citation needed there. I don't use one, and most people I know don't use one.

hocuspocus
1 replies
6d7h

That's an exaggeration but I assume 70-80% in upper middle class would be realistic? At least in Norway and Denmark, maybe a bit less so in Sweden.

zulln
0 replies
6d6h

The numbers differ a bit in different sources, but seems to be around 60% for Sweden. https://gs.statcounter.com/os-market-share/mobile/sweden Based on that upper middle class being a bit more common seems likely.

Regardless, the original point stands regardless of it being 50% or 80%.

mensetmanusman
0 replies
6d6h

Aren't you part of the royal family?

Grustaf
0 replies
6d3h

In the upper middle class in Copenhagen it’s more than that, seeing an android phone is very rare.

Even in the metro you can go days without seeing one.

filoleg
4 replies
6d3h

This makes me wonder, what’s the iMessage situation in Japan? Their smartphone market is also majority iOS, sitting at above 60% (while it is only a little bit above 50% for the US)[0].

Despite that, I am yet to hear about their version of the whole “blue bubble exclusion” controversy. It could definitely be just due to the japanese users not being super active on western internet, and not necessarily due to that controversy not being a thing in Japan. But it could just be a non-issue in Japan.

Can anyone with knowledge of this chime in?

0. https://www.pcmag.com/news/ios-more-popular-in-japan-and-us-...

hocuspocus
3 replies
6d3h

LINE absolutely dominates the Japanese market in instant messaging and beyond (it's a super app like WeChat or KakaoTalk).

filoleg
2 replies
6d3h

Yeah, I was familiar with LINE and Kakao, and I like how similar the setup is for SK and Japan.

Thanks to your point, this way we can easily see that despite SK being android-dominant and Japan being iPhone-dominant, both are not heavily into iMessage and prefer their native super apps instead.

Which provides a solid data point in favor of those claiming that the iMessage proliferation and dominance don’t necessarily have a direct causation stemming from iOS/Android dominance in a given market.

hocuspocus
1 replies
6d3h

Interestingly enough in Korea, the iOS market share is fairly high among some demographics, especially young professionals with enough disposable income. Android (Samsung, at this point) phones are seen as an option for boomers or younger kids.

So in practice my wife uses FaceTime quite a bit with her siblings, and falls back to KakaoTalk when needed. Her iMessage usage isn't zero either, but mostly 1:1, group chats happen over KakaoTalk, since you know everyone will be there.

I don't know if similar patterns are seen in Japan.

filoleg
0 replies
6d2h

Yeah, I suspect there is indeed something special about Kakao compared to LINE as well.

Out of my friends who moved to Japan, pretty much not a single one of them uses LINE aside from rare one-offs. But with Kakao? Hell, everyone I know who even traveled to SK uses Kakao on regular (not even talking about those who moved there) pretty much as the main app in general for so many different things.

EDIT: oh wow, this sent me down a pretty interesting rabbithole. Apparently 85% of people under 30 in SK had an Android as their first phone, with 53% of those people having switched to iOS since then[0].

0. https://www.counterpointresearch.com/insights/30-south-korea...

firecall
0 replies
5d11h

Same in Australia, and my friends in the UK.

Blue / Green bubble is a total non issue.

We use Telegram or Facebook Messenger.

Facebook Messenger and FB Groups are the main form of comms for School networking.

Whats App is huge in the Uk by all accounts.

I have friends in LA who say the blue / green bubble situation is a non issue for them, and they use Android.

However it might be an issue for other non Middle Ages demographics and so on.

Still, I have a suspicion the drama over bubble colour is hyped up but the US media.

geraldwhen
2 replies
6d6h

One Android user means you can no longer send images, video, gifs, or emoji. You can’t react to messages. Sending and receiving no longer works on wifi, so it doesn’t work well in many workplaces.

SMS is a disaster, so it’s best just to leave out the green bubbles.

everforward
0 replies
6d1h

Just to add to this, iPhones send potato quality video to Android. I am constantly reminding my family that uses iOS that they have to send an iCloud link.

The videos are genuinely useless, I don't know why Apple bothers. It sends like 240p "90s security camera" quality video. I can't tell who anyone is, I once thought a bear in a video was a wolf.

Iirc, Android pops up some kind of "this video is too large, do you want to share it with Photos instead?" modal that converts it to a Photos link instead of sharing directly. That's not perfect, but it's a damn site better than sending a video that you know is useless.

StressedDev
0 replies
5d23h

iPhone users can react to messages when Android users are in a chat. Also, I would not call SMS a "disaster". It works well for text messages and images. These are the two most important things for most people. Also, I have sent images to Android users and they have never complained about image quality. I really think some people are overstating the importance of iMessage. Does it add some nice features? Yes. Is it amazing? Nope. Also, I suspect that the discrimination problem is more of a people problem. Basically, the people who discriminate will find something else to discriminate on if they did not have iMessage.

SkeuomorphicBee
0 replies
6d7h

This is a problem, out of band communication is always a second titer and always overlooked, always incomplete. We as developers see this every day with documentation running out of date in relation to code. The same way the out of group communication falls behind the primary channel.

JohnFen
0 replies
5d19h

I think that's a great thing, actually. I'm included in too many group chats as it is. Group chats are awful.

geraldwhen
6 replies
6d6h

SMS is not reliable. Messages are routinely lost.

withinboredom
3 replies
6d5h

iMessages too. "failed to send" is a real thing, with no notification.

StressedDev
1 replies
5d23h

Messages / lets you know if it could not send a message. I do not know if these are iMessages or SMS messages, but I have seen the error message.

withinboredom
0 replies
4d11h

Yes, there's an error message, but if you close your phone, it won't notify you that it failed to send. Hours/days later, you might reopen the message thread to find the message was never sent.

Just pointing out that effectively, it is the same "problem" that SMS has with dropped messages that happens quite rarely (both are rare, actually).

geraldwhen
0 replies
6d

Once my now wife switched to iOS at my cost, we’ve had 0 issues.

StressedDev
0 replies
5d22h

I have not had a problem with SMS. I think it depends on the cell phone network companies. Some are reliable. Some are not.

JohnFen
0 replies
5d19h

I haven't had an SMS message get lost in over a decade now. It used to happen every so often, but apparently whatever the issue was got fixed.

extraduder_ire
0 replies
5d16h

If you're (iphone) sending a message to an imessage user (beeper, or someone switched off iphone) with their phone number, and they're enrolled in imessage, an SMS will not be sent and they will not get it.

This is hearsay based on prior threads, but I haven't read a word against it.

lencastre
0 replies
5d8h

people are surprisingly patient with messaging,… WhatsApp was down for 2 hours like last Tuesday at 3am and a civil war erupted in Brazil and stuff

danpalmer
0 replies
6d8h

This could easily backfire. Given the blue bubbles it's not possible to know if you're talking to an Android user, which means from the iOS user's perspective, iMessage is just less reliable.

unstatusthequo
39 replies
6d16h

Apple owns the delivery mechanism. I don’t believe that a third party using their ecosystem will last long. Nor do I want it. There are plenty of cross-platform things out there. Signal, Telegram, WhatsApp. Why does everyone care so much? Google can paint their Android robot blue. Then maybe all this silliness will end?

rezonant
15 replies
6d16h

Because Apple embraced texting by supporting SMS, then extended it by forcing all the text conversations that they could into their own proprietary infrastructure, and is extinguishing it by using punitive product design to create pressure on communities of people to all use their products so that everything goes over their proprietary network.

I don't want an over the top chat app, I just want to text people.

Terretta
10 replies
6d15h

How do you want Apple to tell iPhone users whether their messages to someone are being recorded by that person's telco and made available to other plan holders on that phone plan?

How do you want Apple to indicate if this chat participant is costing you money by the message or free?

Everyone's concerned about teens. Presumably teens know that T-Mobile and the other carriers give the family plan adults the ability to read their dependents text messages. As a teen I would want to stick with the encrypted bubbles your parents can't read and tell my parents about, thank you very much.

It's not punitive product design. It's seamlessly integrated and meaningful, both on chat leaks and on costs of messaging: Blue sky, text safely. Green could literally cost you.

stonogo
3 replies
6d15h

T-Mobile does not give primary account holders access to messaging content of other lines, regardless of the relationship between users.

filoleg
2 replies
6d3h

It doesn’t anymore, but it used to for pretty much all phone carriers in the US.

And even now, on T-Mobile (as that’s the one I use, so the only one I can verify myself), if you have an account with multiple lines (e.g., a family plan), you can go into your account, click “Usage”, then “Text messages”, and it will show you all text info for all lines on the account (but no actual text content). And not just for “kid lines”, but for all regular lines as well. You can look by individual line or download that data as a bulk file.

I just checked my t-mobile account, and despite it not showing the text content (which t-mobile certainly has access to, unlike imessage; t-mobile cannot even track metadata for those individually), it shows an entry for each text with the phone number with info on who was the sender vs receiver, timestamp, and other metadata.

Luckily, T-Mobile only shows that I had 8 incoming messages (all of them were just automated verification code texts) and no outgoing messages this month, because pretty much all my messaging these days is either on discord or imessage.

Even without the actual text content though, that metadata is still some very sensitive info that teenagers almost definitely wouldn’t want their parents to track. Hell, I am not a teenager, have nothing interesting in that data (doubt anyone would care to know about existence of those 8 automated verification messages, and neither would I be embarrassed if someone did), and still absolutely wouldn’t want anyone else to be able to see that info.

stonogo
1 replies
5d21h

I've been with T-Mobile for twenty years and in that time it has never released messaging content to account holders. Their cybersecurity record may be trash, but misinformation isn't really helpful.

I'm not convinced that handing everything to a different company is a solution, but I'm glad you found a plan you're comfortable with.

filoleg
0 replies
5d13h

Just to be clear, I wasn’t trying to criticize t-mobile. Been their customer for the past 8 or so years, and I wouldn’t have stayed if I had some serious reservations about them.

I stand corrected though, you are right, i don’t think the content of messages has been ever obtainable. At least not since 2006 when it became explicitly illegal for carriers to provide that info to anyone (including the customer paying for the phone line) outside of special circumstances like a court orderc subpoena, etc. (so practically it isn’t an option for the heavy majority).

However, it is factually true that i can get metadata (datetime of each text, phone numbers of both parties, who sent who how many messages, etc) about texts being exchanged from my carrier by just clicking through a couple of menus in the app today. I checked that right before posting my earlier comment. And it is also factually true that despite the carrier not being allowed to disclose to me the content of those messages, they themselves indeed have have full access to the content in plaintext.

brandon272
2 replies
6d15h

I have recent experience talking to non-techie younger people recently about this very issue and none of them were aware of the security differences of SMS vs. iMessage.

Teenagers know that blue = iPhone and green = non-iPhone/SMS and that blue offers significantly more features and functionality vs SMS (delivered/read receipts, group chats, stickers, rich media, memojis, etc), which is the overwhelming reason why blue is preferred.

HenryBemis
1 replies
6d10h

Plus the cost. Over here in the EU, back in 2010 (?) SMS was an expensive thing, you would pay dearly for each or have to buy a "50/100/500 SMS package" or similar.

So lowering the cost of 3G made it more economical if your friends had iPhones as now you could spend €20/month for '1GB' (which was mostly iMessage & web browsing at the time) and avoid spending that simply on SMS. (excuse the price inaccuracies if any, it's been a while since I had that iPhone 3GS)

em500
0 replies
6d7h

Back in 2010 iPhones were expensive status symbols in the EU, approximately nobody bought them to save money on SMS. In some markets the really heavy texters bought Blackberries for a while just for BBM, but that got killed pretty quickly by Whatsapp.

8note
2 replies
6d14h

Did you get this before?

All your messages have been recorded by the government, since the government has been collecting all push notifications on iPhones, and iMessage runs over push notifications

rezonant
1 replies
6d13h

Actually no, the end to end encryption on iMessage is envelopes inside the push notifications. The message content is not readable, even if you intercept APNs messages.

keep_reading
0 replies
6d13h

And it wasn't a blanket capture of push notifications anyway, right? Nobody has confirmed so far this is a Room 641a situation

denkmoon
3 replies
6d12h

Because Apple embraced texting by supporting SMS

what? sms is a basic phone function, how is supporting sms "embracing" anything?

If you, as an iOS user, don't want to use iMessage you simply go flip the toggle. If you "just want to text people", it's just that easy. Really.

viraptor
2 replies
6d7h

Making iMessage which handles SMS, but by default transparently upgrades you to another protocol is the first two parts of EEE. Realistically, no normies flip that switch.

joshmanders
1 replies
6d3h

Realistically, no normies flip that switch.

Got stats to back this up? I have 3 friends who use iPhone's that do have that toggle flipped.

viraptor
0 replies
5d13h
makeitdouble
13 replies
6d16h

Nor do I want it

Why does everyone care so much?

You seem to both care about it, and also wonder why other people care about it ?

Otherwise, looking from the sideline it's fascinating seeing Apple fighting this battle that they brought upon themselves and have no chance of winning.

ethanbond
6 replies
6d15h

I care about it because lack of iMessage is still a very good heuristic for spam. Not perfect anymore, but I reckon this will make it much worse.

makeitdouble
5 replies
6d14h

Your advice was "There are plenty of cross-platform things out there. Signal, Telegram, WhatsApp", but you don't seem happy to take it and move away from iMessage either.

This tension is at the center of the it all, and why Beeper Mini exists in the first place.

ethanbond
4 replies
6d13h

What? I pay for iMessage. You’re just arguing for the right to use products for free, and in Beeper’s case to create monetized products that use others’ products for free.

makeitdouble
1 replies
6d12h

I'm arguing that the crux of the issue is a lot more than just "why don't they use something else ?" The same way you see value in iMessage, other users also see value in iMessage. You may want them to go away, but to my eyes that's the same weight as other users wanting to be there. I'll be standing in the corner with the popcorn to see how it turns out.

On what is paid and what is free, Beeper mini is free, iMessage is free (as we've learned from the whole saga, you don't even need an icloud account). Using someone else's public facing API without consent is rude, but hey, our whole industry started with kits to plug into the AT&T network with unauthorized material, and as of now no money is changing hands.

ethanbond
0 replies
6d5h

Beeper Mini wasn’t free. It became free the first time it was shut off.

Yes I’m sure “can anyone use other services as their product backends for free, directly against the TOS of said service” is going to be a really interesting and complicated legal question…

Jtsummers
1 replies
6d13h

What? I pay for iMessage.

I doubt that. iMessage is a free service if you have almost any Apple OS product (iOS, iPadOS, macOS). You aren't making ongoing payments for the iMessage service.

You could say you paid for iMessage in that you bought a device that worked with it. But you do not pay for iMessage.

ethanbond
0 replies
6d5h

Do you think this is a relevant point somehow?

hx8
5 replies
6d15h

have no chance of winning

I think Apple will almost certainly win on a purely technical game of cat and mouse.

I think you need to adjust your definition of winning. Blocking 5% of messages is a 'win' for Apple. I won't use a messaging service with a 95% success rate. I won't migrate from iMessage to Beeper. I will submit, Apple would have liked a more decisive victory.

makeitdouble
2 replies
6d14h

My definition of a win for Apple would be to have the problem go away and the attention dissipate. That's how it went for Nothing's attempt for instance, where it was instantly ridiculed and everyone forgot about it.

Right now, they blocked a part of Beeper mini, and nobody expecting a rock solid service would join Beeper Mini so Apple's won't be losing any of their core customers.

But the news cycle keeps going on, Beeper Mini is still there for those the group of users that wants it alive, and I wouldn't be surprised if next week for instance actual iMessage users came out to complain about getting kicked out of the service as colateral damage from the whole additional filtering.

And of course this whole publicity for Beeper is a door opened to any other company to give it a shot, as Apple is playing the cat and mouse game, and not taking any more drastic option.

Apple isn't losing either, but they're now dragged into guerrila like battle with no upside for them.

nucleardog
1 replies
6d10h

so Apple's won't be losing any of their core customers.

They won't be losing _any_ of their customers. For the most part[^], nobody using Beeper Mini has paid Apple for anything... otherwise they wouldn't need to use Beeper Mini.

[^] Yes I'm sure there's at least a few people with an iPhone and a Windows PC or something that see this as "iMessage on Windows".

makeitdouble
0 replies
6d9h

Beeper mini is not ready for regular use, so it's not even a question, but I think there's many potential use if it was any good.

For instance if you have a mac and an iPad but use an android phone, iMessages will go to both Apple devices but not where you want it the most, on your phone. That's the kind of pain point that pushes a group to fully move to another service if the android members have enough weight, but would be fine if there was a reliable android client.

mastazi
0 replies
6d14h

on a purely technical game of cat and mouse

based on the history of tech-related cat and mouse games, then Apple will probably lose.

Just like Sony could not prevent people from pirating Playstation DVDs, Apple itself could not prevent iOS jailbreaks, music labels could not prevent CD ripping, etc etc etc

if there are enough people who are strongly motivated to bypass whatever protection, eventually they will probably bypass it.

8note
0 replies
6d14h

Apple wins when you aren't allowed to message somebody using beeper, rather than you switching to beeper from iMessage

jauntywundrkind
7 replies
6d14h

Why does everyone care so much?

Happy to explain. First thought, why do you care so much?

Nor do I want it.

Why? What about exclusivity makes the world better? Why shouldn't I be able to communicate well with someone using an Apple device? Why should someone using an Apple device not want someone to communicate well with them?

Sure there are other systems. But switching costs are so high. Especially with iMessage, folks are going to use what's provided them out of the box. It doesn't seem like a reasonable ask to get everyone en masse to agree to & switch to a lone cross-platform system. What's really needed is standards & interop. You should be able to use what you like, be that iMessage or RCS or Signal or XMPP. But none of these options should be locked out of working with others.

I'm so baffled by the strident defenses against possibility. From someone whose name is @unstatusthequo at that, going to bat for status quo lock in seems like a low and dark comedy. Un status quoer, un status quo thineself. Don't triple down on the fixed & limited!

8note
4 replies
6d14h

They're using "buying an Apple device" as a spam filter, rather than using democratic means to put good regulations that are anti-spam.

smcin
2 replies
6d7h

Yes. They switched to that ~2020/1. You can no longer make a Genius Bar appt by browser on an Android phone; you used to be able to. Seems grossly unreasonable to assume "user has an Android phone" indicates "possible spammer".

filoleg
1 replies
6d3h

Seems grossly unreasonable to assume "user has an Android phone" indicates "possible spammer".

I think you got it in the reverse order.

“User has an android phone” doesn’t indicate “possible spammer”. However, “spammer” typically indicates “user has an android phone.”

smcin
0 replies
4d2h

No, I described it the way Apple implements it; I'm aware of the Bayesian ridiculousness. Anyway, I object to Apple enforcing "all users of non-Apple phones as of 2020/1 can no longer make service appts [for an MBP] from the Apple webpage".

nucleardog
0 replies
6d10h

Regulations... like CAN-SPAM? TCPA?

Or CASL in Canada?

Or the "Spam Act" in Australia?

Or the PECR in the UK?

Yeah, what we need is more regulation. That's been solving the problem.

ChildOfChaos
1 replies
6d7h

What a complete load of nonsense.

iMessage is apples system, we live in an app world, you don’t have to use it, most people use WhatsApp so just download that, Google users have to download it too because it’s a third party service. How is downloading a free app a high switching cost? You can use it alongside iMessage. Most people use

There is plenty of freedom of choice without a third party app hacking into another system. Get a grip.

jauntywundrkind
0 replies
5d17h

It's easy for individuals to switch, but that's good for nothing when your friends and family use other services.

most people use WhatsApp

I only know of one person who uses WhatsApp and it's to keep on touch with folks in Brazil. No one uses it here, from what I can see, and no one has offered to share WhatsApp ever.

The ease with which you suggest yeah everyone can just use an obvious easy to agree upon other central alternative is so facetiously ridiculous and painful. Everyone has a mish-mahs of preferences & existing accounts. It not just that you've deeply shirked what the actual switching costs are (since everyone will pick different things), it's that having these crazy anti-cirumvention laws is stupid, that not having adversarial Interoperability like what Beeper is doing is a sad corporate lichdom sucking the lifeblood of what should be the most vibrant sector of our age: communications technologies. Babel fell, and these merchants of disconnection have been keeping us from communicating with each other ever since, to make a couple more sales. Vulgar pieces of anti-human garbage, just disgraceful.

StressedDev
0 replies
5d20h

I agree with you. This obsession with iMessage does not make a lot of sense. Apple created a better messaging experience because they wanted to add features to SMS. This is good and it makes things better when both people have iOS.

That being said, the reactions in this thread are way over the top. A lot of Android users in this thread seem to think there are a huge number of Apple users who refuse to talk to Android users or that iMessage is some sort of messaging nirvana. Both are not true.

The other elephant in the room is Apple created iMessage, Apple pays for the service's costs, and therefore Apple has the right to decide who can use it. Third parties do not have the right to use it. It's sad that sone non-Apple users feel entitled to use iMessage.

chongli
15 replies
6d12h

My father has an iPhone 8 which did not receive the latest iOS update. I can iMessage him just fine.

There are millions of people out there running old iPhones like that. If Apple just decided to cut them all off iMessage they would do far more damage to their brand than Beeper could possibly manage.

flomo
10 replies
6d11h

That doesn't seem hard, people like your father can be allow-listed, he's not signing-up out of the blue. (I'm wondering if this "works" because the early adopters were hackintosh types who were already on imessage and not abusers. When the H3rb8l V18gr8 crowd shows up, that is the end.)

HenryBemis
7 replies
6d10h

Now then.. if I am a professional spammer (which I am not), what stops me from buying a second hand mac or a second hand iphone (for $150 each) and start 'doing business' with iMessage? Unless it's an issue of 'iPhones can't be JB-ed like Androids can be rooted to run all shorts of malware/spamming softwares'.

I get Apple's "this is our toy, you won't be making $2/month/user on us".

But "keeping the spammers out" it's a bit.. weird..?

Can someone please describe the WHAT is the technical advantage of Android users to spam over iPhone/Mac users to spam.

realusername
4 replies
6d8h

what stops me from buying a second hand mac or a second hand iphone (for $150 each) and start 'doing business' with iMessage?

Nothing, that's why iMessage is full of spam already.

What scammers do is buying boxes of old half broken iphones and they turn them into relays exactly as you said.

Grustaf
3 replies
6d8h

I have never received a single spam message through iMessage, but regardless. If they have to keep buying new phones all the time as they get blacklisted, in order to keep spamming, the economics of spamming changes.

realusername
1 replies
6d7h

That does raise the bar a little bit but it's probably mitigated by the combination of targeting higher spending users and the additional trust iMessage provides.

Grustaf
0 replies
6d

The difference between being able to send unlimited messages for free, and having to get a new phone every hundred or so texts is pretty large. Free vs 1 dollar per spam text.

SSLy
0 replies
6d4h

I did recieve some spam messages there, so Apple's claims about muh security etc. already is bogus

rezonant
0 replies
4d16h

Unless it's an issue of 'iPhones can't be JB-ed like Androids can be rooted to run all shorts of malware/spamming softwares'.

We're also talking about old, non-updated iOS versions here, jailbreaks are more likely to last when they target these versions.

pjerem
0 replies
6d9h

The whitelist would be on the phone number/icloud id and not tied to the device.

That’d be pretty difficult to get second hand, especially when you can just spam over SMS.

They could even release a new iMessage protocol with another bubble color and let the blue ones become uncool.

usui
1 replies
6d11h

The what crowd?

messe
0 replies
6d11h

Spam.

stefandesu
1 replies
6d11h

My mom has an iPhone 5s running iOS 12 (current is iOS 17, so the software itself is already five years old), and iMessage still works well.

Leherenn
0 replies
6d3h

I started using a 5s as a temporary replacement phone for a while a couple of years ago, and I couldn't register to iMessage, but I didn't dig really far (it was a generic "registration failed" iirc). It might have been a fluke and not old phones can't register anymore.

pjerem
1 replies
6d9h

I’m not talking about your father but I really doubt that the millions of people running 6+yo phones would care a lot about this. They could still send SMS, it’s not like they would became suddenly unreachable.

Apple could even be generous and still allow group chats or whitelist existing accounts.

Also, you have to take into consideration that iMessage is pretty US centric, the rest of the world wouldn’t really care about this.

filoleg
0 replies
6d3h

The whole point is moot, even though I agree with your take.

There were plenty of confirmation from other users in this thread having their out of the most recent iOS version iPhones (someone mentioned their iPhone 5 currently running iOS12, with the most recent one being iOS17) working just fine with iMessage.

zappb
1 replies
6d14h

Priority? Half the company is on vacation right now!

rezonant
0 replies
6d14h

Hah, that's true. Good strategic timing on Beeper's part I suppose.

rjst01
1 replies
6d6h

Apple has on occasion done out-of-band patches for older devices to fix serious security issues, so it doesn't seem too unrealistic.

StressedDev
0 replies
5d22h

Note Apple does not fix all security issues on unsupported devices. They only fix really bad issues. I do not think it is safe to use an iOS device which does not have the latest version of iOS.

lolinder
1 replies
6d14h

They can certainly escalate with protocol changes, but they still have to contend with older Macs, iPhones and iPads which are out of the support window losing access

This is what people were saying before Apple cut Beeper off the first time. It would be great if there was just one mistake that they made and fixed, but I'm not holding my breath.

rezonant
0 replies
6d13h

Well they didn't cut off Beeper in the way that would block access to older Apple devices. It seems likely that they found a pattern of access performed (or looked at the identifying information provided) by Beeper in order to target it specifically from the server side.

Those were not protocol changes. The iMessage protocol remains unchanged as far as I know. What I'm referring to above is changing the protocol and updating all clients to use the new protocol so that Beeper is left catching up. This could involve adding new DRM mechanisms or even adding cryptographic remote attestation requirements.

pjerem
0 replies
6d10h

Honestly they could just choose to disable iMessages on older devices. For the vast majority of people using those old devices, it would just change the bubble color and Apple wouldn’t fear any backlash.

I’m not saying they should, but knowing Apple, I wouldn’t be surprised at all if they decided to do it.

hexagonwin
0 replies
5d23h

iMessage generally works well on old versions. I used it just fine on an iPhone 5 running iOS 6.1.4 (from 2012!) last year.

josephcsible
75 replies
6d18h

When Ma Bell didn't let people use third-party phones with their service, the government made them change their ways. Why is the government letting Apple get away with the equivalent?

function_seven
26 replies
6d18h

Because Ma Bell was a regulated monopoly, and iMessage is not a monopoly. People routinely use WhatsApp, Signal, Telegram, SMS, FB Messenger, etc.

Don't get me wrong, I love that these guys are poking the bear. I wish Apple would do something to let me send high-quality photos and videos to my Android-owning friends via "text". But I don't think the government has a place to force that issue. Plenty of alternatives exist.

skeaker
7 replies
6d17h

Why not let the government intervene here? Typically my reason for wanting government to not do stuff is because it could affect me, but none of us will never be a trillionaire corporate entity, so anything done to Apple wouldn't apply to us as a precedent. If anything, you could argue that part of the purpose of the government is to stand up to these giant businesses that the average person can do nothing to.

kbenson
3 replies
6d17h

Because usually precedents are not so narrow as to apply towards trillion dollar companies only, and even if they are they can be expanded upon. If you would be against a trillion dollar company forcing a small competitor to open up, you should rightly be worried about allowing the reverse, because the principles by which they justify it are unlikely to discern based on company size.

freedomben
2 replies
6d17h

I (mostly) do favor government intervention with Apple, but you make a good point. Originally the income tax was only to apply to the uber mega rich. It didn't take long for it to apply to all the middle class too.

skeaker
0 replies
6d17h

Yes, that's a fair point, but it hinges on the law being weak and poorly worded. Obviously I would not be happy with that either. But loopholes like that are a risk with any action that the market or the government would take, and ideally I would like the government to make a strong, well-worded law that accomplishes only the original intent, which can and does happen frequently as well.

kbenson
0 replies
6d12h

The trick is finding justifiable, reasonable reasons that don't cause havoc with our economic system, which IMO necessitates they they not target an arbitrary employee size or specific market percentage, or revenue. What is "large" is very relative, and not just by individual opinion, but temporally. What was a large company just 70 years years ago is nothing compared to those of today.

As much as I would like to see Apple, Google, Amazon, Microsoft and the like not have so much power (socially, economically, most likely at the government level as well), I think the only way we'll actually make any progress towards the problems that allow large companies like that and allow their negative consequences is to attack some of the specific aspects of our current system they abuse to their benefit, and not them specifically.

For example, very strict privacy laws and control over tracking to curtail the biggest problems of the data companies, laws about control over your own devices and what you do on them (software) and with them (repair) for the hardware companies, etc. Otherwise we'll just see some other company take up the same practice and have all the same problems.

jonhohle
1 replies
6d17h

Why let them intervene? The government isn't there to cure all ills, nor should we want it to be. This seems like something the market can handle. Messenging systems have come and gone (ICQ, AIM, MSN, Yahoo Messenger, Blackberry, etc., etc., etc.). They've been locked to hardware, semi-open, and completely open. There will be dozens more, all with their own benefits and drawbacks. Fortunately, not one is required for any part of life.

skeaker
0 replies
6d17h

Why let them intervene?

Because it would be the most sure-fire way to be certain that it actually gets done, whereas "the market" is less certain and prone to manipulation tactics such as lock-in. Returning to my original question that you kind of dodged, why not let them intervene?

lxgr
0 replies
6d17h

While I'm also in favor of Apple doing something, anything really, that's better than the frustrating status quo, I could see how blunt/incompetent regulation might weaken encryption.

I've been wondering if we can already see the foreshadows of Apple's next move, actually: CKV is already only possible between modern (iOS 17.2 or macOS 14.2 and above only) devices, and their RCS implementation will presumably not be end-to-end encrypted.

I could see them opening up "legacy iMessage" (i.e. non-CKV, non-ephermerally-encrypted) and integrating RCS, but assigning new color to "modern iMessage" exclusively. That would credibly count as opening up their service, while still preserving a distinguishing feature for Apple devices, and even nudging people to upgrade some old devices.

theturtletalks
6 replies
6d18h

What’s stopping an open source beeper alternative where users host their own notification server? The rest is client-side anyways.

solardev
5 replies
6d18h

Network effect? The whole value of it is that it lets you use existing networks (iMessage and SMS). Otherwise people could just switch to WhatsApp or any of twenty Google messaging services.

theturtletalks
4 replies
6d17h

No I mean a beeper alternative that uses the iMessage backend. The tricky part with beeper is that they have their own notification server that gets the notifications from Apple and turns them into what android understands. That should be self-hosted by each person because it would contain the FairPlay key.

derefr
3 replies
6d17h

It’s a trivial cost that people don’t want to pay. Sadly it can’t be run as some kind of ala-carte computation that can scale-to-zero like a Lambda function can, because it needs to be an active connection-oriented daemon that keeps per-connection state — i.e. something that always maintains at least one real OS thread, holding open real OS sockets, on the same machine (so that those sockets don’t break at the TCP level.) In other words, for an individual to deploy their own push daemon, it would necessarily need to live on a $5/mo VPS or something. And people don’t value iMessage at $5/mo.

(…which naturally leads to the question: why is there no Lambda-like serverless compute substrate that allows your function to speak a connection-oriented protocol, by externalizing the connection-hold-open and per-connection book-keeping state into the routing layer, such that your own function in the system could scale-to-zero? Exactly like Pusher did for websockets 15 years ago, but routing to a vertically-integrated serverless compute layer rather than a “passive” PHP/CGI-ish REST backend. Seems like an obvious extension for Cloudflare Workers…)

jkarneges
2 replies
6d16h

why is there no Lambda-like serverless compute substrate that allows your function to speak a connection-oriented protocol, by externalizing the connection-hold-open and per-connection book-keeping state into the routing layer, such that your own function in the system could scale-to-zero?

Fastly Fanout + Compute?

(disclosure: Fanout tech lead)

derefr
1 replies
6d1h

Not generalized, AFAICT; from reading the docs, Fanout just does websockets, no?

I'm talking about a routing layer that could allow a serverless function to be the backend for an arbitrary stateful TCP protocol, e.g. IRC, SMTP, FTP, PGSQL, etc; where the service doesn't need to add support for a new L7 protocol for functions to use it; instead, the support for the L7 protocol is part of the function, the same way it's part of a regular network daemon.

I would imagine that this would work like the following:

- the logic for the L7 protocol's connection state-transitions lives within the stateless function;

- each call to the stateless function is handed the pre-transition L7 state, and returns the new post-transition L7 state, with the routing layer persisting this state between calls. (Compare/contrast: Erlang gen_server state management, between the gen_server module [routing layer] and the user-supplied delegate module [compute layer].) Any arbitrary compute node can then handle each "step" of the computation... but only one compute "worker" at a time will ever be tasked with handling messages for a given connection, because each call requires an input L7 state, which depends on the output L7 state of the previous compute-step;

- the function declares in its metadata what L4 protocols it accepts (TCP/UDP, maybe SCTP or DTLS, or TCP+TLS, etc); the routing layer then manages flows for these as portable persisted state-machine-state resources on virtual IPs owned collectively by the routing layer mesh — similar to how a distributed wireless AP or eNodeB manages established flows across its listeners;

- likely, the L4 state lives in the same persisted (distributed KV?) store as the L7 state, but just isn't passed back to the serverless function — except for maybe SNI info in the case of TLS. (This would make sense to me because you're never going to update the L7 state without also updating the L4 state. I can imagine a connection-listener state machine that touches the "L4 part" of a backing data-structure in response to most L4 packets, but then, when it's built up enough of a buffer to have a complete L4 message†, it would pass the message to the L7 and get an L7 update in response, and then commit a new L4+L7 state together.)

- And yes, the †ed part above means that another required part of the serverless function's metadata, would be a definition in some language of a lexer/parser for recognizing+extracting toplevel L7 messages from the carrier stream, such that the routing layer would then use this lexer/parser to know when it has one or more lexically-complete messages in its buffer to be pushed down atomically to the compute layer. (I say "lexer/parser" because mostly this code wouldn't have to parse messages — the L7 is still receiving just a stream of bytes it's expected to parse itself; but it's required to be "just a stream of bytes" sliced to consist of exactly one L7 message per call. So for most protocols, this would be cheap: most stateful protocols are either "newline is always toplevel break" or they're binary length-prefixed, and these can both be delimited by a dumb lexer, or even a fixed-buffer DSP-alike. Sadly, though, some stateful protocols require full parsing to know where each message ends. So the routing layer would need to support both — probably with a lot of "function compilation time" grunt-work put into recognizing when the routing layer can apply less than a full Turing-complete parser to the task.) Probably for most protocols this could look like an abstract-DSL version of something with capabilities equivalent to a Wireshark dissector definition or eBPF bytecode; and that in turn could be abstracted over with something like a "buildpack" / "cloud-init" sort of strategy, where instead of supplying the code yourself, you supply the URL of a repo that contains the code.

jkarneges
0 replies
5d17h

Thanks for the thoughtful reply. What you describe sounds awesome, and in fact some of these concepts are present in our stack but not fleshed out to this level, so maybe we could get there someday. The challenge is making it practical.

Currently, Fanout supports HTTP in addition to WebSockets. We consider the system to be generalized, in the sense that the user can build whatever they want on top of the available primitives, and we can always add more primitives. Most people are implementing "web" protocols (REST, SSE, GraphQL, etc), so what's available today gets us pretty far. You're right of course that we don't support arbitrary TCP protocols.

I suppose the reason we don't support bare TCP is Fanout is optimized for implementing pub/sub-style interfaces with minimal compute. In that context, it is preferable to work with coarse-grained input in order to avoid per-session processing. However, with Fastly Compute now in arms reach, I think we could embrace per-session processing, in which case implementing arbitrary TCP protocols could become practical.

Your idea of supplying custom L7 parsers to the routing layer is clever, and is not too far off from some things already on our mind. For example, our routing layer supports inspecting requests using custom rules supplied by the compute layer, though this is not yet exposed to Fastly users. Relatedly, the routing layer has an internal component that parses TCP streams into messages (by known protocol) and ships them over an IPC without caring about their content. So it's not too much of a jump to imagine how we could get to user-supplied L7 parsing.

ants_everywhere
4 replies
6d17h

SMS

Can you change the SMS app on Apple devices now?

irjustin
2 replies
6d17h

This is conflating problems.

This thread is about asking the government to step in to allow 3rd party devices into iMessage, which is decidedly outside of SMS, but gov won't step in because iMessage isn't a monopoly on messaging nor SMS. It's a monopoly on... it's own protocol/service?

Android users always get a message an iPhone user sends so to claim gov intervention monopoly on the basis that the end user can't change the SMS app isn't an argument.

ants_everywhere
1 replies
6d16h

iMessage isn't a monopoly on messaging nor SMS

People tend to misinterpret what it means to be a monopoly for antitrust law. The obvious example here is United States v. Microsoft Corp., where the inability to remove Internet Explorer was at issue. Being unable to set an alternative messaging app with equivalent functionality (such as Signal) on a mobile phone is at least as cumbersome to the user as being unable to uninstall Internet Explorer, despite the ability to install competing browsers. The iMessage case is arguably worse because the competing browsers had the same features as IE. Apple uses its control of the handset to disable other messengers from supporting SMS on iOS.

Also relevant in that case is that Microsoft was argued to be a monopoly not over all computers or even all desktop computers, but over intel-based personal computers. This illustrates that the scope of the market in these cases is often smaller than one might initially think.

The FTC has a page here that goes into it [0].

Then courts ask if that leading position was gained or maintained through improper conduct—that is, something other than merely having a better product, superior management or historic accident....Courts do not require a literal monopoly before applying rules for single firm conduct; that term is used as shorthand for a firm with significant and durable market power — that is, the long term ability to raise price or exclude competitors.

In this case, forcing users to use iMessage for SMS decreases the likelihood that users will install an alternative messenger with a smaller feature set due to Apple's control over the OS.

That reduced likelihood compounds quickly because the popularity of a messenger tends to scale with the square of the install base.

[0] https://www.ftc.gov/advice-guidance/competition-guidance/gui...

irjustin
0 replies
6d10h

Thanks I appreciate the deeper explanation.

For discussion, using MSFT vs US as the central point, it seems as if US was arguing that Windows and IE were "one and the same" or at least inseparable as concepts while the US gov said no way.

Applying that central argument to this situation doesn't feel the same in that, if US gov tried to apply the same argument it would lose in this case.

When I think "phone device", I think phone calls and SMS are inseparable ideas to the device itself. That they are functions that belong to the phone. Probably stems from my days of owning a Nokia or Razor.

But maybe that is an out dated concept and my thinking needs to change because any program should be able to control the phone's SMS and calling function via API.

I'm unsure is all I can really say.

dghlsakjg
0 replies
6d17h

You can choose to use sms only, and not use iMessage messages.

camkego
2 replies
6d17h

"Jury Rules Google App Store Operates as Monopoly" is in the headlines this week. So it seems maybe there is some risk to Apple with regards to iMessage.

GeekyBear
0 replies
6d17h

Google was found guilty of antitrust violations, not of having a monopoly.

Having a monopoly is not illegal.

Here's an explanation of the verdict from a lawyer familiar with tech and antitrust.

EPIC WIN | Why Google Lost and What it Means For Apple

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MZ23ExDJSec

2muchcoffeeman
0 replies
6d17h

Android has 70% market share.

badwolf
1 replies
6d17h

Good news, once Apple implements RCS next year, no more postage-stamp sized MMS! Halleloo!

websap
0 replies
6d17h

Really hope Apple makes a banger implementation of this. Not whatever Google and Samsung have been upto now.

daedalus_j
0 replies
6d14h

This. This is what Apple should ACTUALLY get punished for. I don't care that they intentionally lock down their service I wouldn't use it anyway as it's not as secure Signal.

What I DO care about in that they intentionally degrade the experience for communicating outside their garden.

Maybe it'll get better with them finally supporting RCS, but I doubt it. If only they were compelled to let users install an SMS handler app of their choice, then this whole "green bubble" thing would instead be a "geez, why is my iPhone so shitty at handling SMS" thing instead.

stouset
16 replies
6d18h

Ma Bell had a monopoly.

This is one messaging app on one brand of phone. Nothing stops you from using another phone, or multiple or other messaging apps. And messaging apps aren’t restricted by a “default” in quite the same way a web browser is. I have friends on WhatsApp and Signal and Instagram and I message them all without any appreciable difference in effort.

josephcsible
9 replies
6d18h

As long as iMessage doesn't support federation, Apple has a monopoly on it too. If not, then Ma Bell wouldn't have had a monopoly either, since you could say mailing letters was a competitor to telephones.

madeofpalk
7 replies
6d18h

That's nonsensical. Reddit has a monopoly on Reddit - of course it does.

Any service online is under no obligation to allow for widespread interpoperation - that would be madness.

hn_throwaway_99
3 replies
6d18h

Any service online is under no obligation to allow for widespread interpoperation - that would be madness.

Lol, "madness". The Digital Services Act in the EU would like a word.

GeekyBear
1 replies
6d18h

Although the final determination is not yet locked in, the word is that Bing and iMessage have been found to not be popular enough in the EU to fall under the DMA.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-12-06/apple-ime...

nicce
0 replies
6d18h

You can see full list of current decisions here without paywall:

https://digital-markets-act-cases.ec.europa.eu/gatekeepers

nicce
0 replies
6d18h

You are confusing with Digital Markets Act.

https://digital-markets-act.ec.europa.eu/about-dma_en

unyttigfjelltol
2 replies
6d18h

It's madness for monopolistic communications providers to refuse interoperability.

madeofpalk
1 replies
6d18h

iMessage is far from monopolistic.

Messages on iPhone is interoperable with any other mobile device - it supports SMS!

V-eHGsd_
0 replies
6d18h

it supports SMS!

and isn't RCS support coming too?

tedunangst
0 replies
6d18h

And here you are, posting on a site with a monopoly on HN comments.

CivBase
2 replies
6d18h

Right. This is much more similar to MS and Internet Explorer back in 98.

Interestingly enough, one of the outcomes of that case was IE for the Mac.

jonhohle
1 replies
6d17h

It required no ongoing infrastructure for people to use IE either on Windows or on Mac. iMessage requires servers, bandwidth, and operators.

CivBase
0 replies
6d2h

Yeah, they're definitely not identical. But from an antitrust perspective I think the MS case is at least much more similar.

bscphil
1 replies
6d18h

You can run that argument the other way. It's desirable for there to be only one system of phone lines installed everywhere, where anyone with a telephone number can call anyone else. It would be desirable for there to be only one e2e encrypted "double-ratchet" messaging protocol, for the same reasons.

In the case of Bell, the universal lines already existed, the problem was that Bell owned them all and wouldn't let anyone else use them. That was a "monopoly" so there was an argument for breaking it up so that everyone could use the lines.

In the case of iMessage (and others), the creators are deliberately building out many different incompatible "lines", and not letting anyone else use those lines. And now people are coming along and saying because it's not a "monopoly", we can't do anything about that. But the real goal was the same in both cases - making universal communication possible. That's what we're all frustrated about here, and the fact that there are dozens of apps trying to wall off competitors is part of the cause of that. Apple is a target because iMessage is the largest such "private line" in the United States.

viraptor
0 replies
6d17h

It's desirable for there to be only one system

What gets a bit lost in the conversation for iMessage is that the protocol/infra and implementation get merged into one. This is approached in many countries for telcos by splitting the companies providing the lines from the companies providing service on top of them. It's not perfect, but it's better than previous approaches.

ldarby
0 replies
6d8h

. Nothing stops you from using another phone,

Do you realise phones cost money and not everyone can afford an iPhone?

jmye
14 replies
6d17h

Why are y’all so intent on using iMessage? I (honestly) don’t understand the serious passion behind forcing Apple to open it to everyone.

SMS still gets through, and other apps still work. It seems weird to focus so much on this and not on just using something that fits your use case, but maybe I’m missing something.

freedomben
8 replies
6d17h

This has been discussed ad nauseam. In the US, not being a "blue bubble" can have a very high social cost and get you excluded from groups and communication opportunities. People just want to be able to communicate without ridiculous walled garden vendors throwing stupid road blocks in their way and making things artificially harder to get you to "buy your mom an iphone."

shiroiuma
3 replies
6d17h

If Americans are this dumb, I don't see why they need any laws to protect them. Why would I want to be part of any groups that won't have me because I don't use an iPhone?

Thankfully, here outside America, this isn't an issue: absolutely no one uses SMS or cares about this stuff.

Jtsummers
2 replies
6d16h

If Americans are this dumb, I don't see why they need any laws to protect them.

They aren't. The bubble color thing is an exaggerated claim and a lot of whining from a bunch of clowns. No one actually cares in the US except for a bunch of children (who are always prone to following trends for the sake of following the trend) and a handful of immature adults. The rest of the country doesn't know or care

freedomben
1 replies
6d4h

That's a very ignorant thing to say. Try to force yourself to live with images and video of quality to SMS so you can actually understand the problem, and let's see how long you think it's just immaturity.

We can disagree about solutions, but strawmanning stuff is dumb, and then dismissing the problem that you strawmanned is even more dumb

Jtsummers
0 replies
6d

What's ignorant about it? MMS sucks, I didn't say otherwise. Android <-> Android MMS also sucks. That is not an iPhone <-> Android specific issue. MMS was an adequate solution in the feature phone days when the phones and displays were mediocre at best. It's been a terrible solution since mobile phones became cameras with a phone.

The strawmanning is done by the people claiming iPhone users are, as a whole, excluding Android users from their communications over it. That's what I'm rebutting, not that MMS sucks. Only children and immature adults do that. The vast majority of people don't care. They either use MMS and accept it sucks or switch to another service, they don't exclude people over it.

jmye
1 replies
6d16h

That’s a ridiculous reason to demand an open protocol from Apple. I get that it sucks when you’re in high school and kids are massive jerks about social standing, but this can’t be a serious use case post college, right?

Anecdotes about mean girls on Tinder dumping Android users don’t really seem compelling, either.

freedomben
0 replies
6d4h

It is surprisingly a serious use case post college. In my personal life, if someone is going to be so stupid and immature as to not want to communicate with me because I'm an Android user, then good riddance. I don't need people like that in my life.

However, there are a lot of people who are impacted, and it's not always the case of the mean girl on tinder dumping an Android user. I know people who have group chats with family and friends, that will be left out because the iPhone is programmed to downgrade the entire group's chat if a single member is an Android user. This makes it so that messages don't work all the way, quality on images and video is garbage, and other legitimate usability concerns. Are super snooty, it's that it truly is very difficult to communicate from an iPhone to an Android phone.

grok25
1 replies
6d17h

The fact that some people are snobs doesn’t justify the government dictating software specifications to Apple.

freedomben
0 replies
6d4h

It's not just snobbery. There are real and serious usability issues. When doing group communication between an iPhone and a group member who is in Android user. The entire group chat gets downgraded to SMS, which means a lot of messages don't get through the way they were intended, and images and videos are so downgraded as to be unusable. The people that I know personally who are affected by this, it has nothing to do with snobbery and everything to do with pragmatism. People on iPhone will only use iMessage in the United States. It's stupid, it's absurd, it's self-inflicted, but ultimately it is what it is and all the advocacy of moving to something else is not moving the needle.

shrimpx
4 replies
6d17h

It's because SMS is unencrypted, and this is an effort to have secure communication between iOS users and Android users (since iMessage is Apple-device-only). There's also a status factor, where Android users are lowly "green bubbles" in iMessage, which signals decreased security and questionable support for the interactions available to iMessage users.

Of course everyone can switch to Signal and this is a moot point, but millions of Apple users use iMessage and aren't likely to switch.

jmye
1 replies
6d16h

How many people really care about encrypted text messages? Most of the time, I’m sending my girlfriend pictures of our dogs. If I cared about encryption, we’d download something else (or use gchat or whatever). This just doesn’t seem like it should be that big a deal.

shrimpx
0 replies
5d21h

Yeah it seems like it's more about "blue bubble" status than it is about encryption.

grok25
1 replies
6d17h

Of course everyone can switch to Signal and this is a moot point, but millions of Apple users use iMessage and aren't likely to switch.

Doesn’t this mean that most people simply don’t care?

shrimpx
0 replies
5d21h

On the iOS side people don't care, but apparently on the Android side they do?

lm411
7 replies
6d18h

It's not the equivalent.

If the third party phones allowed users access to Ma Bell's network, switching systems, etc, without paying Ma Bell - then it might be equivalent.

I'm pretty sure that would be considered theft of communication services.

sottol
6 replies
6d18h

I feel that's not right either. Apple did not physically build the phone network and nobody is piggybacking on their network, Apple isn't hosting anyone's photos or videos afaict and the user pays for bandwidth, they maybe pay for notification relay to their own users.

It's more like phone manufacturer X that accesses Ma Bell's network creates phone with slightly better call quality that only works with other X phones and is worse with anyone else's phones. And they start doing that once they have >50% market share.

jonhohle
3 replies
6d17h

What type of infrastructure and operations do you think is necessary to handle 8.4B messages per day. So far, the cost of those systems and teams has come from hardware sales. The benefit is that it is effectively a paid for service and doesn't need external support from advertisers or by selling user data.

Miner49er
1 replies
6d17h

A couple hundred servers, and like 5 engineers.

jonhohle
0 replies
6d3h

Minimally that’s a few million dollars per year for KTLO. At least a few million more for ongoing development. Why should it be free for everyone?

freedomben
0 replies
6d17h

It really depends on what stack you pick and what kind of engineers you have. What's App famously used Erlang (an excellent choice for this) and was able to scale to astronomical levels with a fairly small engineering team and hundreds of instances.

nicce
0 replies
6d17h

Traffic goes to Apple’s servers.

Servers handle routing and storing. iMessage will deliver and store the message to server, and then to receiver when it is online.

It is major cost when there are millions of users on, top of notifications.

User pays for ISP, only up to the closest link.

GeekyBear
0 replies
6d17h

Apple did build out the iMessage service and pays the bills for the servers it runs on.

Aaron Swartz was hounded to death by the Feds for unauthorized access to a website and charged with a violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act

He wasn't even trying to turn a profit.

albert180
5 replies
6d18h

I guess the EU will be closely watching with Digital Services Act

hn_throwaway_99
2 replies
6d18h

Unfortunately, the EU isn't going to save us with this one. iMessage usage is minimal in the EU because so many people use alternate messaging services, and the EU already ruled that iMessage won't be forced open because it isn't widely used by business users.

In the US, iMessage market share is much higher because back in the aughts we didn't have the sky high SMS rates which forced so many users to other messaging services in other countries.

shiroiuma
0 replies
6d17h

Exactly: here outside the US, absolutely no one uses SMS, so no one cares about this issue at all. It's like arguing over the rights to videotape standards. So to me it's somewhat amusing reading these arguments here.

JoshuaRogers
0 replies
6d17h

I would suggest that as often as not, when the EU intervenes in technological affairs the result isn’t that things get massively better but rather that people are forced to deal with corporations finding ways to maliciously comply with the letter of the law.

sbuk
0 replies
6d18h

Why, when use of iMessage is a rounding error across the European Union, will the EU rule that Apple are a messaging Gatekeeper? The noises coming from the investagtiong body seem to indicate that they will not treat iMessage as such.

nicce
0 replies
6d18h

Beeper is commercial app, and because of that it classifies as ”unfair”, unpermitted use of Apple’s private services.

They are making supporting argument for Apple, unfortunately, if any regulation happens.

lm411
0 replies
6d16h

... nobody is piggybacking on their network.

I would suggest that is exactly what Beeper is doing. Not the end users ISP / WAN connection obviously, but certainly Apple's iMessage infrastructure (servers, switches, bandwidth, etc).

iMessage is not a simple P2P platform.

alwayslikethis
0 replies
6d18h

Because Apple has enough cash to pay off enough congressmen.

NettleBurr
67 replies
6d20h

Apple on Wednesday appeared to have blocked what Beeper described as "~5% of Beeper Mini users" from accessing iMessages

Apple previously issued a (somewhat uncommon) statement about Beeper's iMessage access, stating that it "took steps to protect our users by blocking techniques that exploit fake credentials in order to gain access to iMessage." Citing privacy, security, and spam concerns, Apple stated it would "continue to make updates in the future" to protect users. Migicovsky previously denied to Ars that Beeper used "fake credentials" or in any way made iMessages less secure.

Not commenting about the ethics of all this, just wondering why technically Apple can only block ~5% of Beeper Mini users instead of all of them? Could this potentially be tied to the use of an email id as the iMessage handle?

turquoisevar
29 replies
6d19h

Not commenting about the ethics of all this, just wondering why technically Apple can only block ~5% of Beeper Mini users instead of all of them? Could this potentially be tied to the use of an email id as the iMessage handle?

Apple could block 100% of the people using Beeper and throw Hackintosh users into that as a bonus as well.

The reason they’re not doing that is because it could have unintended consequences as some are using someone else’s actual device serial number and those people would be inconvenienced.

It’s nothing that can’t be easily solved, the moment they reach out to support either in person or via phone/chat Apple can immediately verify if they’re using a legitimate Apple device, but even if it boils down to a small percentage of users you still need to prepare for the influx of support requests.

To do this, Apple uses a scoring model to determine if they can access iMessage and historically they’ve been pretty generous by allowing clearly spoofed serials if the Apple ID involved is in good standing and has a positive history, think of it as a credit score. They can tweak the threshold score and probably are testing this out as we speak to find a sweet spot they’re content with.

Apple could also push out an update tomorrow that would end this once and for all by utilizing device attestation and leveraging Secure Enclave, but this would potentially lock out older devices, something they were willing to do when they upgraded the FaceTime protocol a couple of years ago, but they might not want to do that this time around.

beeboobaa
12 replies
6d18h

Apple could also push out an update tomorrow that would end this once and for all by utilizing device attestation and leveraging Secure Enclave

More proof that Remote Attestation is evil and does not exist to serve the user.

mngdtt
10 replies
6d17h

As a user, I am very well served by remote attestation when it is used to stop cheaters in videogames or spammers in messaging platforms.

rezonant
3 replies
6d16h

This assumes that all Beeper Mini users are spam, and that's a weird take.

More charitably, perhaps you are saying spam will increase over previous levels. From what I understand, Apple does not have any spam prevention technologies in Messages at all, neither for incoming iMessages, nor for SMS messages-- so the only thing keeping your iMessage conversations free of them is the obscurity of the protocol. Perhaps they should just add anti-spam tech like other texting clients have had for years.

StressedDev
1 replies
6d10h

The same technology Beeper Mini uses to get onto iCloud can also be used by spammers, crooks, etc. to get onto iCloud. You either get both or none. Frankly, as a paying Apple customer, I want them to close this because I hate SPAM. Also, the obsession of iMessage seems very strange to me.

beeboobaa
0 replies
6d4h

Nonsense. You still just receive SMS messages as normal, so any spam will be delivered to you regardless.

The solution to spam is to petition your government to crack down, or do server side filtering. Banning random phones is like playing whack a mole.

43920
0 replies
6d13h

When you get an iMessage from a new contact, there's a "report junk" option; I'm assuming Apple does some kind of spam detection with that (ie if a particular Apple ID gets enough reports, it gets blocked). I've never seen any public documentation of it though.

kmeisthax
2 replies
6d12h

I know of no messaging platform using remote attestation for antispam - and, as far as those platforms continue to support web registration, they can't use remote attestation[0]. Even if they could, it wouldn't help. Remote attestation verifies that your client code is running without modification. What you care about with spam is keeping the spammers from registering large numbers of unrelated accounts, which doesn't require modifying the client at all.

I will give you that remote attestation does help anticheat. However, the current state of anticheat in games is so invasive now that you have to install special kernel drivers, and that kernel has to be on bare metal (no hypervisors allowed). This only happened because a specific genre of fast-twitch first person shooter has a lot of closet cheating going on. But it also gets blindly applied to things like rhythm games that absolutely do not need kernel-level anticheat[1]. So every game gets more invasive because of one hyper-competitive game genre triggering an anticheat arms race.

[0] Or at least, for as long as Web Environment Integrity stays dead

[1] Altering the client isn't even the most common way of cheating rhythm game records. For example, a good chunk of the rules for, say, Pump It Up's online leaderboards is "don't have other players play on your A.M.Pass" and "don't hook up a hand controller onto an online cab". Neither of which would be stopped by an anticheat system (and yes, PIU being an arcade rhythm game, there's shitton of encryption on it).

kccqzy
0 replies
6d7h

Remote attestation does more than ensuring code is not modified. It definitely can be used to prevent spammers from registering a large number of accounts.

And no, web registrations as a must have is an extremely antiquated concept.

JimDabell
0 replies
6d11h

as far as those platforms continue to support web registration, they can't use remote attestation

They can; Apple (and others) have implemented Private Access Tokens (PATs) for this.

https://blog.cloudflare.com/eliminating-captchas-on-iphones-...

beeboobaa
0 replies
6d5h

Both of those are issues that can be solved server side if the company actually cared. They don't, and instead want to steal your freedom so they can push DRM.

SpaghettiCthulu
0 replies
6d16h

You are incredibly selfish. Neither of those are more than a mild inconvenience. On the other hand, loss of personal freedom and privacy are major issues with real world consequences.

CaptainFever
0 replies
6d8h

iMessage already has a spam problem, even with attestation.

turquoisevar
0 replies
6d3h

Like any tool, it can be used for good and for evil and the perspective of which is which depends on who you ask.

You can use device attestation to combat spam by making sure only authentic devices connect to your service.

You can use it to facilitate contact key verification together with a hardware key to ensure contacts know who they’re talking to.

I’ve used it to make sure that introductory promotions are only offered once per device.

On the other end of the spectrum you can use it as a DRM of sorts to make sure ads on your website aren’t blocked.

jwells89
9 replies
6d17h

The reason they’re not doing that is because it could have unintended consequences as some are using someone else’s actual device serial number and those people would be inconvenienced.

One is supposed to try to find a plausible (follows certain rules) but invalid serial to use for hackintoshing and not use real serials, but of course in practice there’s always some number of careless users…

rezonant
7 replies
6d16h

This is interesting. How do you define "invalid" and why can Apple not also detect such invalidity?

There's been some talk that blocking this for Beeper will also block this for Hackintosh, but are we just talking about iMessage?

Because I have a hard time believing that (A) Apple can't just block this for iMessage without affecting whatever other system services rely on it and (B) That Apple would care if Hackintoshes lose iMessage.

If those two are true, and assuming Beeper Mini also tries to find plausible but invalid serials to use, then Hackintoshes definitely aren't the reason they aren't blocking based on this.

jwells89
4 replies
6d15h

My understanding is that the serials represent information, including model and date/location of manufacture. It’s therefore possible to create correctly formed but impossible serials, for example one that represents a pre-touchbar 2015 MBP manufactured in Ireland in 2018.

Apple should easily be able to tell when someone has done this.

turquoisevar
3 replies
6d15h

They indeed used to have data like that encoded in it.

Not too long ago, however, they moved to a completely randomized serial format, perhaps partly because of iMessages shenanigans.

nneonneo
1 replies
6d13h

iMessage seems to use quite a lot of information from the hardware aside from the serial number. See https://github.com/JJTech0130/pypush/blob/main/emulated/data... for the data that is used to calculate the "validation blob" to activate iMessage. Several of the keys (not values!) are random-looking gibberish like "kbjfrfpoJU" and "oycqAZloTNDm", while others are normal things like "product-name" and "IOPlatformUUID".

turquoisevar
0 replies
6d13h

Those random looking keys are derived from the hardware and together with the values they serve as seeds for some of the keys.

Server-side there’s a bunch more information used from the Apple ID.

Together it results in a score and the server then decides if it meets the threshold before deciding to play nice.

rezonant
0 replies
6d14h

Hmm, how many bits of entropy are in one of these things? Can we calculate the likelihood of collision?

turquoisevar
1 replies
6d15h

Apple can detect this, but they’ve allowed it in most cases when it’s done with an Apple ID in good standing and some history.

Why they allowed it is anyone’s guess, but the leading theory is that they valued not hindering established customers over locking iMessage completely down and perhaps the bad PR that comes with banning someone’s Apple ID over this.

rezonant
0 replies
6d14h

Well they could block the client itself, independent of blocking the Apple ID. It's the client that sends the serial information. Your Apple ID only gets associated with it indirectly.

turquoisevar
0 replies
6d15h

Yeah, that's what they're supposed to do, and to the credit of the Hackintosh community, that’s what most tutorials suggest.

But like you said, there are always people who don’t care about others as long as they have theirs.

There is, so far anyway, no reason to go against this best practice because, even though Apple can instantly detect a bogus serial, their currently used scoring threshold still allows you to use iMessage provided you’ve got a non-fresh Apple ID in good standing.

dylan604
3 replies
6d17h

Apple could also push out an update tomorrow that would end this once and for all by utilizing device attestation and leveraging Secure Enclave, but this would potentially lock out older devices, something they were willing to do when they upgraded the FaceTime protocol a couple of years ago, but they might not want to do that this time around.

Just give it a couple more hardware generations to ensure the largest % of older hardware upgrades. Anything pre-secure enclave chip would need to be in the low digits I'm guessing. Then again, if they are going to block Messages, that might be the incentive to get these older device users to upgrade.

Sunspark
2 replies
6d10h

Are you talking about the iOS 6 to 7 transition where the security certificates expired and Apple wouldn't issue a new one and said you needed to switch to iOS 7 if you wanted Facetime to work again? That was my last iOS device.

dylan604
1 replies
6d3h

I don't remember that as I just upgraded the OS. Why would an OS upgrade be some thing you wouldn't do? Seems to me like you have bigger personal issues than some technical one with this situation.

Sunspark
0 replies
1d12h

I just really liked the old skeuomorphic UI which dripped gorgeousness and didn't want to switch to a bland flat white interface.

rezonant
1 replies
6d16h

The reason they’re not doing that is because it could have unintended consequences as some are using someone else’s actual device serial number and those people would be inconvenienced.

As far as I know, it's not actually known what model numbers, serial numbers, and disk UUIDs Beeper Mini is sending (and no the POC repository doesn't really tell us)-- if you have a source that talks about this I'd love to read it!

_rs
0 replies
6d13h

I’m pretty sure Apple could figure this out pretty easily by running it on an Android device themselves, considering they control the endpoints it talks to

I_Am_Nous
28 replies
6d20h

Seems like a chess move. Apple blocks a small percentage of users instead of all of them, which casts uncertainty on using Beeper Mini at all. It also allows them to A/B test various methods of blocking or honeypotting Beeper Mini logins without giving away any big secrets.

From Beeper's perspective, they now have to figure out why only those logins were blocked and if they need to patch something or not. Apple could be wasting their time and blocked random users out of spite.

Time will tell.

standardUser
16 replies
6d17h

Ugh, it is beyond depressing to imagine Apple bigwigs sitting around discussing ways to make absolutely certain teens keep getting ostracized until they buy their overpriced product.

StressedDev
9 replies
6d10h

If someone is ostracizing you because you do not own an iPhone, you probably want to avoid that person. I have never met anyone who would do this and frankly, only an extremely nasty person would do this. I am mean seriously, why ostracized someone because they use a different type of phone?

vineyardmike
3 replies
6d9h

Do you forget being a teenager? /s

It's not simply a MeanGirls experience of not being cool enough. Most Americans don't use or have 3rd party apps like WhatsApp, so most people will fall-back to SMS, which is objectively a much worse experience. I feel like the adult equivalent is getting group dinner with a friend with severe allergies or dietary restrictions. You care about your friend, and you want to invite them, but the effort to include them is high and sometimes you want to try a restaurant you know they can't eat at, so you skip the invite. I'm a vegetarian, and I know my friends skip me outright in the steakhouse dinners.

50% of Americans have an iPhone, and that is even higher for teenagers (almost 90%). That means >50% of people have this superior group functionality built-in (can't beat defaults). That means for teenagers, most of your friends will have iMessages, and most will be able to do effortless group chats, and its a statistical dice-roll to see if someone doesn't have an iPhone. You become "that guy" that causing disruption, and you'll 100% be ignored sporadically.

Again, the issue isn't "I don't wanna see green bubbles", the issue is "I don't want to bother with a third party app for this conversation". Since most people don't regularly use 3rd party messaging apps, there's a coordination issue to be solved picking the app and confirming everyone has it, OR falling back to SMS which is pretty messy. The alternative is to skip one friend and just fill them in later. Sometimes it's easier, it's not an elitist attempt to ostracize.

text0404
1 replies
6d1h

sorry but this sounds like it's written by someone who is definitely not a teenager and who hasn't experienced this before.

vineyardmike
0 replies
6d

Not a teenager today but I was ~13 when iMessages came out, and owned an iPhone since. Except for 3mo when I was 16.

withinboredom
0 replies
6d5h

This is an adulting problem. Most of my adult friends use WhatsApp around me. So, our kids use WhatsApp because that is how they communicate with us. So, the "actual" solution is to start using WhatsApp (or whatever) and get your friends to do it. Then force your kids to do it ... then bam, iMessage no longer matters.

standardUser
0 replies
5d22h

I am mean seriously, why ostracized someone because they use a different type of phone?

Your current lived experiences may not be in sync with people in their teens or twenties. This is a well-known phenomenon called "green bubble bullying" that Apple has masterfully orchestrated to make people force other people to buy their phones.

jollyllama
0 replies
5d23h

They're imagining that they won't just get made fun of for something else. It never ends; you either have to not care, conform, or sustain trauma.

fennecfoxy
0 replies
6d7h

First of all you forget what it's like being a teen/young person I guess, or perhaps your personality is different from most, but that sort of social pressure is quite tough on people.

Apple also relies on the path of least resistance as well, if someone is having a poor experience in a group chat with their iPhone friends...it just becomes "easy" for them to choose an iPhone the next time they change phones.

Look at other companies, Microsoft porting Office etc to MacOS, Google services like maps gmail etc available on the iPhone. It's only Apple that walls their tech in so that it's only on iPhone - they don't care about profit lost to not expanding their reach because they reinforce their own platform.

expensive_news
0 replies
6d3h

I have met people that will do this, and trust me, they are worth avoiding.

Aeglaecia
0 replies
6d9h

I admire the surety in children applying logic to their behaviour

averageRoyalty
5 replies
6d17h

Given the majority of their users don't care about that, it seems unlikely to be an accurate portrayal of the internal discussions.

standardUser
2 replies
6d17h

You don't think Apple brass is doing everything in their power to convince non-iPhone users to switch to an iPhone? Every excluded teen is another potential customer and to pretend they don't know that is beyond naïve.

frumper
0 replies
6d12h

I doubt anyone is shocked that Apple execs want to sell more Apple products. They are paid very well to do that.

averageRoyalty
0 replies
4d11h

I do, but the group that consists purely of American teenagers (even if it's 100% of them), is one of many demos, and a relatively small one globally.

rezonant
1 replies
6d15h

Do you have data about that or are you assuming you and your friends are representative of the majority of users?

It seems like one side of the debate says "I have experienced this, and the product features seem to encourage this behavior" and the other side says "No one really does this, you just have a few insane friends who happen to use iOS".

Feels like gaslighting when you've experienced this sort of behavior yourself, and not even from tweens who aren't well adjusted to the world, from your middle aged and up friends and family who are bought into that ecosystem.

averageRoyalty
0 replies
4d11h

I am not refering to myself or my friends at all.

That said, I've only seen this green vs blue debate reported on in the context of American teens. Even if it is accurate in that group (questionable), that group make up a tiny portion of global smartphone users. Even if the actual group who care are double that, it's still tiny.

As such, it seems unlikely this is such a critical thing that Apple bigwigs are sitting around discussing this group.

MuffinFlavored
10 replies
6d18h

My bigger question is how are any Beeper Mini users getting through (aka how is Beeper Mini's backend getting around the fact that... I thought you needed a valid serial # to an Apple device specific to you to log in + use iMessage)

dylan604
9 replies
6d17h

at some point Serial Box will have a list of valid/invalid hardware serial numbers. or, someone will crack the code to generate valid codes.

oh wait. i drifted off back to the 90s software cracking days.

MuffinFlavored
5 replies
6d14h

if apple checks an online database for "you authenticated and paired this hardware ID to this apple ID", is that a "Beeper Mini" killer?

rezonant
1 replies
6d14h

What about when the hardware is legitimately sold and reset and a new Apple ID starts using it?

chongli
0 replies
6d12h

You have to de-register the device with Apple when you sell it. Otherwise you retain the ability to remote wipe and brick the device and the buyer has no recourse.

After you de-register it the buyer can register it with Apple under their Apple ID.

Wingy
1 replies
6d3h

I have Apple devices that are allowed to use iMessage including some that I don't use. If my computer can impersonate one of them to allow me to message from my workstation that's success.

MuffinFlavored
0 replies
6d

If my computer can impersonate one of them to allow me to message from my workstation that's success.

But Beeper Mini isn't asking users to bring-their-own valid hardware registered Apple hardware ID tied to their Apple ID, they're doing something different/unknown behind the scenes

dylan604
0 replies
6d12h

isn't that essentially what they are doing? that's one of the reasons a stolen iDevice is pretty much worthless.

rekoil
2 replies
6d6h

Apple doesn't have predictable serial numbers anymore, they're all just random numbers corresponding to rows in a database. There's no way to generate them.

dylan604
1 replies
6d3h

It wasn't a serious idea. The fact I mentioned it along side Serial Box should have been a clue. Maybe you're too young to know what Serial Box was, or the 90s cracking culture. Shh, the adults are speaking =)

rekoil
0 replies
19h33m

No, I remember Serial Box, serials.ws, MegaGames, scene intros, etc. I just have trouble determining tone on the internet sometimes is all.

MuffinFlavored
3 replies
6d18h

Migicovsky previously denied to Ars that Beeper used "fake credentials"

As far as I know (I could be wrong), in order to log in + auth to Apple's various protocols that are involved to make iMessage work, you need a valid Apple ID and some sort of valid hardware ID.

If you don't have either of those, how would you be talking to Apple's services?

If their POST /login requires email + password + valid registered serial # of device sold that isn't flagged stolen and not shared across 100 accounts... how does Beeper Mini expect to work?

saintfire
2 replies
6d13h

AFAIK, and I could be wrong, beeper mini registers a new HWID with apple for each phone. Which is why they thought it was unpatchable, at first, as they would need to determine which phone is in fact an iPhone.

nneonneo
1 replies
6d13h

There's much more to the validation protocol than just HWID/serial. See https://github.com/JJTech0130/pypush/blob/main/emulated/data... for a list of the data that is pulled from the platform and used for validation. I would assume that Beeper registrations either use data from a pool of real devices, or made-up data that Apple might "permit" (because hackintoshes) but can definitely detect and block at any time.

MuffinFlavored
0 replies
6d

use data from a pool of real devices

This feels super against terms of services. Taking a paying Apple user's hardware ID and using it for a non-paying user?

Also, I thought you had to tie/pair hardware ID to Apple ID.

user_7832
1 replies
6d20h

Not commenting about the ethics of all this, just wondering why technically Apple can only block ~5% of Beeper Mini users instead of all of them? Could this potentially be tied to the use of an email id as the iMessage handle?

I wonder if it might also have anything to do with govt action. I believe a US elected rep recently tweeted in favour of Beeper. Apple cares much more about PR than they'll admit, and server costs for them are negligible.

nozzlegear
0 replies
6d18h

The rep was Senator Elizabeth Warren, who was once pretty popular during the Obama years when she helped create the CFPB. She sadly doesn’t hold much sway (e: in the senate) anymore.

jimmyk2
0 replies
6d19h

Might be intentional. Unreliable service is probably worse as a user. Never know if the system is down or if it’s just you. Plus probably harder for beeper to work out how/why they are getting blocked.

hackernewds
0 replies
6d14h

block 5% for experimentation data to observe whether it's net viable for their metrics to allow cross-pollinating the users finally

shreyansh_k
66 replies
6d20h

This seems to be Beeper's insincere attempt at dressing up their grievances to appear as if they were in advantage of the [Apple's] customer.

Apple has made it clear that they won't bring iMessage to Android. People who choose to invest in Android phones know they won't get access to iMessage.

It seems a bit entitled behaviour for someone to feel like Apple should be forced to bring iMessage to Android for any reason besides Apple's own choice, and that they know better than Apple on how to run Apple's business.

dataangel
25 replies
6d20h

It's not entitled, it's pushing back against a gigantic company exploiting network effects to create user lock-in, because that's easier than competing on the merit of your products.

joshmanders
13 replies
6d20h

Now apply this logic to any other company product, maybe even your own or the company you work for and tell me if this sounds as ridiculous to you as it does me.

FirmwareBurner
5 replies
6d19h

Most companies don't have network effect with lock-in, and especially those we depend to live our everyday lives: I can send money to my buddy who uses a different bank, I can send emails to gmail users from my yahoo account , I can also refuel my car at any station and not be tied to one brand. Imagine being locked in to any of those.

There are of course a lot of companies with lock-in out there, but none with such big network effect deeply intertwined with peoples' communication and personal lives (in the US).

verwalt
3 replies
6d17h

The thing is: it is not locking in. At the moment through SMS and it will support RCS next year.

And RCS will solve it all. If group chats and high quality media work, people will only complain about the one thing they hate most:

The bubbles will still be green.

But I am from Europe, we don't care around here and I don't like iMessage that much. Compared to Telegram/Whatsapp, it's slow at loading old messages, has sync issues and only gut swipe to reply this year.

rezonant
1 replies
6d14h

1. You cannot opt to use SMS on Apple Messages when talking to someone. If they are registered on iMessage, you are forced to use it. This happens transparently, automatically, and for the most part, silently. This helps to create the illusion that Apple devices are just better at texting, and anything else is old and shitty. When in reality, Apple itself only supports their own proprietary messaging system, and an ancient texting protocol that is bad.

2. I hope you are right that RCS will solve everything once Apple implements it, but I don't have confidence it will. The biggest problem is how they handle group chats: If iMessage group chats cannot seamlessly convert into RCS group messages (without duplication or splitting) then it will solve it well enough. This is unlikely to happen unfortunately

Longhanks
0 replies
6d9h

You absolutely can disable iMessage for yourself and text anyone using regular texts (SMS) only, you are never forced into iMessage. You can deregister your phone number on Apple's website without any Apple device.

Also, where is the "illusion" about "being better at texting"? Apple is literally coloring the bubbles differently to tell you that _iMessage is not the same_. How much more explicit can it get?

viraptor
0 replies
6d7h

And RCS will solve it all.

If the deployment is anywhere close to how it went in Australia, RCS will be a bumpy road with many people turning it off to get messages delivered. My usual experience for months now is: send a message, get a "can't deliver" notification an hour later, resend by SMS, next message delivers through RCS and switches the conversation, repeat.

jmye
0 replies
6d16h

?

You can send a text to any user, regardless of service. I don’t understand your analogy.

modeless
2 replies
6d18h

We're talking here about literally the most valuable public company in the world and a product (iPhone) used on average dozens of times and several hours daily by nearly 50% of the US population. I'm generally a free market kind of guy but even I admit that at this scale it is OK to apply different standards.

danaris
1 replies
6d2h

Speaking as a life-long Apple user who mostly thinks the rampant attacks on Apple are basically the same as the ones people have been throwing for 30+ years, just with "Apple is dying, no one should use their stuff" replaced with "Apple is too big/tyrannical, no one should use their stuff"...

I agree.

But.

The solution to that is to get antitrust regulators to step in and use the force of the law to change things.

Not to cheer on a third party using security vulnerabilities to piggyback onto Apple's service and charge a subscription for it.

modeless
0 replies
6d2h

There is no security vulnerability, that is FUD. They're charging a subscription to fix Apple's bugs that intentionally cripple communication communication with Android phones for Apple's own benefit and nobody else's.

orangecat
1 replies
6d16h

Now apply this logic to any other company product

Ok...third parties should be able to sell ink that works in your HP printer, or coffee pods that work in your Keurig, or tires that work on your Ford.

tell me if this sounds as ridiculous to you as it does me

It sounds not ridiculous at all. The only difference with Beeper is that there is some marginal cost to handling messages, but we all know that's not Apple's real problem with it.

inferiorhuman
0 replies
6d13h

  …third parties should be able to sell
To take that analogy a step further: third parties can sell messaging apps for iOS.

refulgentis
0 replies
6d14h

I'm curious, before (and even while!) they do their assigned thought exercises, would you mind explaining to the rest of us how ridiculous it is?

makeitdouble
0 replies
6d15h

Any other company using network effect to force lockin should have the same logic applied, yes. That feels like a pretty sane philosophy to me.

To turn it around, which company do you see this not applying ? What services with a strong position do you see justify to abuse it to lock users ?

rewgs
9 replies
6d18h

Speaking for myself, I think iMessage is a good product, and it's one of the (many) reasons I use Apple devices as daily drivers.

You make it sound like people only use iMessage because of the network effect/lock-in, and clearly aren't considering that perhaps said network effect exists at least in part because iMessage is just...good.

standardUser
5 replies
6d17h

If the product is so great why doesn't Apple make it available on more platforms? The answer is because it's not a product, it's a marketing tool. And a very successful one based on the widespread bullying it has caused.

wrboyce
1 replies
6d16h

Give me a fucking break, “bullying” for Christ’s sake!

They invented a nice thing, made it available on their hardware, and now people like yourself who refuse to buy their hardware for whatever reason are salty you can’t play on the platform so result to juvenile arguments like “I’m being bullied” to try and get your own way. It’s fucking ridiculous and you need to grow up.

EDIT: that should be “resort to”.

7jjjjjjj
0 replies
6d1h

Apple did not "invent" instant messaging.

merrywhether
1 replies
6d11h

If Zelda is so great why doesn’t Nintendo make it available on more platforms? Being able to run Nintendo games is a prime feature of the Switch product, and being able to run Apple software and services is a prime feature of an iPhone product. By your definition anything useful about an item is simply a marketing tool?

It’d be a very different world if nothing was allowed to have unique access to anything. It might even be better, but it would be a long way from this current version of capitalism.

potatototoo99
0 replies
6d9h

The answer is the same: because their platform is not very good. So if buyers had the chance they'd instead buy Zelda games for the PC for instance.

It would be a real problem if Nintendo had a monopoly on good games on the US.

frumper
0 replies
6d11h

Not many Apple products get made for non Apple devices.

soerxpso
0 replies
6d2h

If iMessage is so good, why do so many people want to use Beeper instead? If I thought my Keurig were a good coffee machine, I wouldn't go out of my way to install a different coffee machine.

skeaker
0 replies
6d17h

People absolutely do buy Apple devices purely because of the lock-in. Many people in my own family have. Obviously there are others that just prefer iMessage on its own quality, that goes without saying (which is why GP didn't mention it).

myaccountonhn
0 replies
6d5h

It's fine to use it if you think it's good, hell it probably is. What isn't nice is when I get forced to buy an iphone start using imessage because everyone else is when I don't want that, which is what is happening.

shreyansh_k
0 replies
6d20h

That doesn't seem right. People can also push back against Apple by voting with their wallets.

Apple has been able to create their ecosystem by exerting control over it. If someone doesn't like it, they can start their own business giving people what people want. Now, that's another way of pushing against any gigantic company or Apple.

ck425
11 replies
6d18h

Out of curiosity why does this matter? Do iPhone users not use WhatsApp or Messenger? Is this a USA specific thing? As a UK Android user I've never used iMessage and don't see any reason why I'd need or want to.

infotainment
9 replies
6d18h

USA specific — Americans pretty much universally use SMS messages, which ends up being iMessage for Apple devices.

ck425
8 replies
6d18h

Huh. How does that work with multimedia? Do US carriers not differentiate between SMS and MMS?

infotainment
4 replies
6d18h

They don’t, it “just works” (to the degree MMS can work at all) — which means iMessage is perfectly positioned.

ck425
3 replies
6d18h

Ah so do "free texts" in the USA include MMS? That might explain the continued usage. In the UK MMS often aren't included, if anything they're charged stupidly high, so you'd never send a pic via text message.

wrboyce
0 replies
6d16h

To give you another perspective, I’m UK based too and use iMessage daily to stay in touch with my family and close friends. Every now and then I’ll have bad signal (or maybe the recipient does? I’m not entirely sure…) and whatever I’m sending will be sent as an MMS. It happens so rarely it doesn’t really register, and I’d wager it costs me less than a quid a year (on EE, but I assume most MMOs have similar MMS pricing).

rimunroe
0 replies
6d16h

yes

rezonant
0 replies
6d12h

On most plans in the US, unlimited texting is the only option, and there is no differentiation between SMS and MMS. It's all free with your plan.

jacobgkau
1 replies
6d18h

Carriers typically charge the actual media portion of MMS (e.g. the photo or video) as data.

rezonant
0 replies
6d12h

I'm not sure how universal that is, but it doesn't really matter when data plans are almost always unlimited. After all, iMessage also goes through cellular data.

danaris
0 replies
6d2h

To clarify:

On the iPhone, the Messages app handles SMS.

It also handles iMessage.

They are two completely different protocols, with iMessage's featureset being a superset of SMS's. If you are conversing with someone else with iMessage (either through an iPhone or another Apple device), Messages will automatically use iMessage; otherwise, it will use SMS. (If you prefer to use SMS, you are welcome to disable iMessage on your phone or other Apple device.)

iMessage goes over the IP network, not a side-channel in the cellular system the way SMS does—so you have to have either Wifi coverage or cellular data available; if you don't, as a matter of fact, it falls back to SMS within the same conversation, provided you are conversing with someone else who is identified by a phone number, and not just an Apple ID.

prmoustache
0 replies
6d11h

I guess egoism is so entrenched in the USA that choosing a platform that all your friends and relatives can use to communicate to is just too much for them.

throwaway290
6 replies
6d17h

Apple has made it clear that they won't bring iMessage to Android.

Apple might disagree. https://9to5mac.com/2023/11/16/apple-rcs-coming-to-iphone/

MissTake
5 replies
6d16h

That’s not iMessage.

RCS is a replacement for SMS.

throwaway290
4 replies
5d10h

It's pretty much iMessage.

MissTake
3 replies
5d3h

No, it’s not even close.

RCS is a totally different messaging protocol.

It’s pretty much to iMessage as iMessage is to SMS.

throwaway290
2 replies
5d2h

Reread what I said. I did not say "you are wrong" or "RCS is iMessage". I said "Apple might disagree with you" and "RCS is pretty much iMessage". Why don't you stop trying to make me seem wrong by putting words into my mouth.

MissTake
1 replies
5d

This is the original message you replied to:

‘Apple has made it clear that they won't bring iMessage to Android.’

This was your reply:

‘Apple might disagree.’ and you then proceeded to supply a link to 9to5Mac about Apple interfaces iMessage to RCS.

TFA states:

“But at the same time, iMessage isn’t going anywhere. It will continue to be the messaging platform used for all communication between iPhone users. RCS will simply supplant SMS and MMS and exist separately from iMessage when available. SMS and MMS will also continue to be available as a fallback when needed, Apple says.

This is not Apple opening up iMessage to other platforms. Instead, it’s the company adopting RCS separately from iMessage

The very link you supplied disproves your point.

iMessage is iMessage. RCS is RCS, and SMS is SMS.

Sorry, but iMessage is not RCS.

Base RCS for example does not support E2EE. iMessage does.

You can claim they’re the same as much as you’d like, but their only similarities is that iMessage will send messages to RCS and support the native carrier chosen RCS features.

https://www.engadget.com/what-is-rcs-and-how-is-it-different...

throwaway290
0 replies
4d8h

This is not Apple opening up iMessage to other platforms.

Which I never claimed.

Sorry, but iMessage is not RCS.

The only person who keeps repeating "iMessage is RCS" is yourself.

You can claim they’re the same as much as you’d like, but their only similarities is that iMessage will send messages to RCS and support the native carrier chosen RCS features.

Less than 1% of iphone users even know what e2ee is. Less than .01% disable that icloud backup thing that makes iMessage e2ee useless for them and their contacts.

If iOS has a messaging system that is capable of things imessage today is capable of and is interoperable with android then the only people for whom the separation between imessage and RCS matters is pedantic nerds, no offence.

skeaker
4 replies
6d17h

How is being able to send iMessages to your Android-user friends from your iPhone not to your advantage as an Apple customer?

tgma
1 replies
6d16h

You’d be surprised how many people in the US have purely iPhone social circles. They won’t care.

The graph is almost disjoint. Outside tech nerds, android == poor.

skeaker
0 replies
6d13h

You're still advantaged should you ever make friends with an Android user in the future, or at the very least you're not disadvantaged since you would not have had any difference made to you.

gunapologist99
1 replies
6d16h

It's not to Apple's advantage, though.

skeaker
0 replies
6d16h

That does not address my question.

user_7832
3 replies
6d20h

It seems a bit entitled behaviour for someone to feel like Apple should be forced to bring iMessage to Android for any reason besides Apple's own choice, and that they know better than Apple on how to run Apple's business.

It is simultaneously possible for it to appear entitled, while also recognizing how extremely restrictive, anti consumer and anti competition Apple is. And in this fight of a trillion dollar company vs something a little bigger than a startup, it's fun to root for the small guys who are hitting back at that restrictedness, sometimes even successfully.

shreyansh_k
2 replies
6d20h

It can be agreeable to an extend that Apple seem like an extremely restrictive, anti consumer and anti competition. But, the other side (Android), which has been positioned open, pro-consumer and pro-competition doesn't seem to be true to its roots or any better anyways. Android is mostly dominated by Samsung and Samsung is heavily pushing their own ecosystem of apps, just like every other company, and most brands want to lock in their users too.

It's a sad state of affairs.

rezonant
1 replies
6d12h

You can push your own ecosystem of apps and still allow your customers to replace them. I'm not aware of a Samsung app or service that cannot be swapped out. And I struggle even more to find a Samsung component that is designed to create network effect lock in like iMessage is. And Apple Messages can't be swapped out, it is the only texting app on iOS. You can install Signal or Whatsapp or whatever, but you can only talk to other people who have those apps installed. You cannot use them to talk to any phone number like a texting app can.

fh9302
0 replies
6d11h

RCS can't be swapped out, Google hasn't opened the API so you are forced to use Google or Samsung messages app.

dkjaudyeqooe
3 replies
6d16h

It seems a bit entitled behaviour

What's entitled behavior is big tech thinking it can dictate how and where we use technology and services. Why should we be roped into serving Apple's interests and ignoring own own? Beeper can pursue their own interests while benefiting users, that's hardly a negative.

I'm sure if Ford dictated how and where you drove your car you'd be outraged, but we should kowtow to the likes of Apple?

DeIlliad
2 replies
6d16h

I'm sure if Ford dictated how and where you drove your car you'd be outraged, but we should kowtow to the likes of Apple?

I just wouldn't buy a Ford.

rezonant
1 replies
6d14h

What if Ford made it so that their vehicles drive worse when non-Ford vehicles were on the road, and then when confronted about it told all of their customers that they should convince their neighbors to buy a Ford to solve the problem?

nneonneo
0 replies
6d13h

What if Ford made it so that their vehicles drive worse

Then you really wouldn't buy a Ford. Problem solved?

drexlspivey
2 replies
6d17h

Is Beeper’s whole purpose to satisfy people’s vanity to have blue bubbles or what’s wrong with plain ol’ SMS?

hn_acker
0 replies
6d15h

SMS is not end-to-end encrypted (E2EE). The purpose of Beeper Mini (not to be confused with Beeper Cloud, which is not E2EE) is to allow Android users to send encrypted texts to Apple iMessage users the same way iMessage users can send E2EE texts to each other.

An Android user and an iOS user could both use a third-party app like Signal. But Beeper Mini's main feature is maintaining encryption for chats between Android users and iMessage users, saving the Android users the need to convince iMessage users to switch to a different messaging app. 1. The benefit of E2EE applies to the users on both ends, including iMessage users. 2. With Beeper Mini instead of an E2EE-dedicated multi-platform app like Signal, only one side of the communication pair needs to install something.

Beeper Mini Apple doesn't want to make an iMessage implementation for Android.

dijit
0 replies
6d16h

aside from the magic features not working; SMS costs money.

On some mobile contracts it's pretty close to free these days, but international SMS's are certainly not. - not sure it's a common use-case but it definitely is a common use-case for me.

Ironically, iMessage not being available on Android causes the other messenger apps to be more appealing. Whatsapp/Facebook Messenger. -- because they can be more ubiquitous across friends.

paxys
1 replies
6d12h

Entitled behavior is Apple dictating what code I can run on my non-Apple servers and devices. They can keep blocking it, and people will keep finding workarounds. That's the nature of DRM. It's not a battle they can win.

vlozko
0 replies
6d12h

They don’t dictate that at all. What they do dictate is what devices are able to connect to their network and utilize their push notification service.

rezonant
0 replies
6d14h

People use Beeper Mini because the Apple users they text with want them to. There's zero reason for two Android users to talk over iMessage using Beeper Mini. RCS provides nearly all the same benefits. But when the social pressure is for you to buy an iPhone that you don't want, it's sure tempting to just install an app so that Apple friends can stop complaining, and stop cutting you out of group chats.

If no one used iMessage, the value of Beeper Mini is zero. The value is smoothing the interaction with people who assume everyone is using an iPhone, and treat it as an annoyance when they don't. So effectively saying "just buy an iPhone to use iMessage" means "just buy an iPhone so you can talk to your iPhone friends".

quadrifoliate
0 replies
6d13h

There are reports of kids being bullied (this [1] is an example from a Tell HN post), but I have anecdotally heard similar cases because they were "different" for having a "non-blue bubble" phone.

When there is broad agreement that apps like Tiktok and Instagram are toxic for teenagers, I have no idea why this aspect of Apple's lock-in hasn't received as much attention. It's way more serious than just some users wanting blue bubbles when your applications are common enough that they can cause social isolation and bullying in schools.

----------------------------------------

[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35014499

crooked-v
0 replies
6d19h

to appear as if they were in advantage of the [Apple's] customer

They are. This was perfectly normal and expected functionality once upon a time, back in the days when Adium/Pidgin were still useful.

nocoiner
66 replies
6d21h

Beeper CEO, from the article: "If there's enough pressure on Apple, they will have to quit messing with us." "Us," he clarified, meant both Apple's customers using iMessage and Android users trying to chat securely with iPhone friends.

"That's who they're penalizing," he wrote. "It's not a Beeper vs. Apple fight, it's Apple versus customers."

Not really sure how this is anti-customer. Apple customers have ample access to iMessage, after all. And as has been noted many, many times, there are many means of accessing secure cross-platform messaging.

aesh2Xa1
37 replies
6d20h

Apple has customers who want to use iMessage. Those customers are not able to use iMessage to securely communicate with Android users.

That's pretty clear. If Apple's customers want to be able to use iMessage for such communications then (1) the Android user buys an Apple product, (2) a third party makes a cross-platform iMessage client, or (3) Apple open iMessage to other platforms.

Apple is blocking on (2) and (3).

joshmanders
13 replies
6d20h

Apple has customers who want to use iMessage. Those customers are not able to use iMessage to securely communicate with Android users.

I as a Signal user want to communicate securely with Facebook Messenger users. Therefore Facebook must allow me to reverse engineer their services and make unauthorized systems to allow me to create a service to send messages to Messenger users from Signal.

user_7832
10 replies
6d20h

I think calls for interoperable communication platforms is a good thing!

joshmanders
8 replies
6d20h

Sure I do too, but I'm against this ridiculous notion that Apple MUST allow others to integrate and use their services for free.

My point is nobody has any problem with the myriad of other messaging platforms that are completely closed, but all of the sudden iMessage is the bad guy because you don't want to have a green bubble with iPhone users?

user_7832
4 replies
6d20h

I don't think anyone's saying apple must allow them (though such people admittedly exist on the internet, in retrospect). I think its more of disappointment at the speed at which apple is "patching" this.

joshmanders
2 replies
6d20h

As an Apple user, I'm glad they're patching this fast. It's a security issue and privacy one. Sure Beeper may be using it in a non-nefarious way, that doesn't mean bad actors aren't gonna use this to spam the heck out of iMessage users.

striking
0 replies
6d18h

I've been getting iMessage spam long before Beeper existed.

I_Am_Nous
0 replies
6d19h

You know, I have been getting constant scam texts from "Amazon" for a $289 vacuum that I'm supposed to call a number to cancel the order and it's coming from an email address, or a phone number. Never really got them before in that way.

badwolf
0 replies
6d17h

It seems the CEO of Beeper is literally doing that.

8note
1 replies
6d16h

A proper thing is for the EU to require apple to implement an interoperabile message api and force that to be used as the default, rather than being able to use a non-interoperable messaging protocol as the default

maccard
0 replies
6d9h

Like SMS, which is the default right now unless both users are iPhone users?

kuschku
0 replies
6d9h

My point is nobody has any problem with the myriad of other messaging platforms that are completely closed

That's entirely wrong. A lot of people are angry with every closed messaging platform, which is why people are still maintaining the matrix bridges to Discord, WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger and Signal, all of which are still a cat-and-mouse game, violating the ToS of those services.

Those bridges are actually what Beeper Cloud, their primary product, later was also based on.

And these bridges originally are based on the libpurple backends for Slack, Teams, Facebook Messenger, WhatsApp, Signal, AIM, ICQ, Google Chat, Skype, etc, all of which were created through reverse engineering.

So, yeah, fuck those closed services, messages want to be free, and enough people will care that we'll break all of those services.

sbuk
0 replies
6d20h

And they exist. A lot of them, actually.

skeaker
0 replies
6d17h

Sounds good! I would love to be able to do that.

kuschku
0 replies
6d9h

I as a Signal user want to communicate securely with Facebook Messenger users. Therefore Facebook must allow me to reverse engineer their services and make unauthorized systems to allow me to create a service to send messages to Messenger users from Signal.

That's precisely what Signal started out as :)

Before Signal existed, it was common to use Pidgin or Adium with OTR to send encrypted messages through SMS, Google Chat or Facebook Messenger.

TextSecure – the original name of Signal – was created to improve upon OTR by allowing it to better handle situations where one user was offline while the other tried to send messages. Originally it only supported sending messages via SMS, not via their own servers.

JumpCrisscross
10 replies
6d20h

Apple has customers who want to use iMessage. Those customers are not able to use iMessage to securely communicate with Android users

Of course they do. There's Signal and Telegram and WhatsApp. My principal benefit of iMessage is its relative lack of spam. (And when I do get spam, it gets stomped out fast.)

Apple Music blitzkrieging Spotify is bullshit. The lock on subscription payments is bullshit. I happen to think the App Store is fine, but I'll concede that there's a real debate to be had there. But this isn't a material issue.

lotsofpulp
6 replies
6d20h

Apple Music blitzkrieging Spotify is bullshit.

What is this referencing?

The lock on subscription payments is bullshit.

I pay for app subscriptions outside of the App store, since it is usually cheaper.

JumpCrisscross
5 replies
6d20h

What is this referencing

Spotify launched on iOS. Apple saw them competing with iTunes and basically stole their idea to compete with them. That, alone, would be okay. But Apple Music is privileged within iOS and Apple's marketing in a way Spotify cannot be.

threeseed
2 replies
6d18h

None of this is true.

a) Spotify didn't invent music streaming. There were many services e.g. Pandora that were doing in the years before. It was a pretty obvious idea once devices had faster bandwidth.

b) Apple didn't steal their idea. They acquired Beats who had launched a similar service soon after Spotify.

c) Apple Music isn't privileged. It comes pre-installed but otherwise you can delete the app and use Spotify, Youtube Music etc.

rez9x
1 replies
6d16h

Apple Music is privileged when it comes to Siri. I currently have both a Spotify and Apple Music subscription, and one of the main reasons I prefer Apple Music, aside from shuffle not playing the same 20 songs in a 2000 song playlist, is the great hands free functionality. I can add songs to playlist, play a song next instead of adding it to the end of the queue (which is more of Spotify STILL not having deque support), and I know there are other things I've run into Spotify can't do on Siri, but I'm blanking at the moment.

danaris
0 replies
6d2h

You can absolutely use Siri to control Spotify—both on the phone itself and over AirPlay.

Any functionality that Apple Music allows over Siri that Spotify does not is, at this point, up to Spotify to implement.

lotsofpulp
1 replies
6d20h

Oh, I would apply that to any number of things Apple integrated, for example dropbox/icloud drive.

Google does the same thing. Unfortunately, with the near zero marginal cost of software, I do not see any way around vertical integration unless the law started arbitrarily segregating businesses.

Also, Apple Music came out 5 years after Spotify, so it had a pretty healthy lead. But regardless, any non Apple vendor competing with Apple's bundled products is going to face an uphill battle.

thowawatp302
0 replies
6d10h

iDisk came out in 2000 and functioned like iCloud Drive has, with local caching, since 2003

It predates Dropbox by almost half a decade

SpaghettiCthulu
2 replies
6d16h

I am at a loss on this "spam" argument. I haven't received a single spam message on either SMS or Signal in the at least last year.

maxcoder4
1 replies
6d16h

Same experience with signal, but SMS phishing is a very large issue, at least in my country. Maybe your phone number was just never leaked and you're not present in the spammers databases?

out-of-ideas
0 replies
3d20h

email and phone spam would be a bit easier to mitigate if places-we-enter email+phone (websites that want this info) would give us a list of Emails and Phone-numbers it uses to contact us with, and even email-subject prefixes; it is no different than when you meet an old friend and you each, mutually, exchange phones/emails/physical addresses; why are the UX of all the websites so poorly designed that we consumers do not get to see, proactively, the address they intend to talk to us from?

lazzlazzlazz
9 replies
6d20h

Those customers are not able to use iMessage to securely communicate with Android users.

Well, they can't now as a result of blocking Beeper. But they could — using Beeper.

It's one thing to argue that you won't open the platform because it's additional work to support that. But that argument degrades when they're willing to do the work to shut out unexpected uses of the platform.

If they want to ensure safety, they should do the extra work of making it possible to interoperate with iMessage safely. But safety isn't the priority and everyone knows it.

sbuk
8 replies
6d20h

"But that argument degrades when they're willing to do the work to shut out unexpected uses of the platform."

Or, as many in software engineering call it, fixing potential security holes, which is well worth any businesses time.

I_Am_Nous
7 replies
6d20h

That's how I view it as well, this is a security issue. Beeper is gaining unauthorized access to a service and Apple doesn't like it. The fact that they are not technically breaking anything is kind of like going into a business after hours because the door wasn't locked. You still aren't authorized to be there.

turquoisevar
6 replies
6d19h

The better analogy is using a fake ID to get the locksmith to give you a copy of the house key.

The house is Apple’s servers The fake ID is spoofed device serials and UUIDs The copy of the house key is the authentication blob

Nobody would blink twice if a prosecutor threw the book at someone like that. Still, somehow, I’m sure many here would complain if the DOJ would prosecute Beeper for violating the CFAA by committing computer trespass or if Apple would sue them for violating the clause prohibiting reverse engineering in the OS license.

nvy
3 replies
6d18h

Pretty sure they're buying actual Mac minis and using those device IDs. If you have evidence to the contrary I would be very interested in seeing it.

turquoisevar
1 replies
6d12h

Pretty sure you’re mixing up Beeper Cloud with Beeper Mini.

Beeper Mini is based on pypush, which they’ve bought, and is clearly using spoofed data in the data.plist[0].

I’ve searched, but I’ve found no mention of them purchasing Mac Minis en masse to support the $2/mo Beeper Mini customer’s texting habits.

Besides, it wouldn’t make sense anyway because they used to tout you didn’t need an Apple ID and instead could use your phone number, and non-iPhone IDs don’t allow for iMessage activation on phone numbers, only email addresses.

0: https://github.com/JJTech0130/pypush/blob/main/emulated/data...

nvy
0 replies
6d

Oh maybe I'm mixing up their products.

They've gone full Microsoft with the naming. Next release will be called Cloud.BEEP Core

sgerenser
0 replies
6d5h

I didn’t see anywhere that they’re buying any real hardware for this product for purpose of gaining legitimate device IDs. Source?

noahtallen
1 replies
6d18h

The analogy is off in a meaningful way: you're using a "fake ID" to get the locksmith to give you a copy of your own house key because the locksmith won't accept your real ID. No prosecutor is going to throw the book at someone trying to access their own house.

Apple claims I'm in control of my messages. They're on my devices. Apple refuses access to Android. Why can't I use technology to make my messages work on Android? They're my messages!

You might respond that this impacts someone else. For example, me using Beeper means that anyone messaging me is impacted. My counterpoint is that the user is always the weakest link. I can share messages sent to me with anyone I like, and that's legally fine to do. So why can't they be shared with a different software service that I trust? (People use all kinds of 3rd party email clients which could be untrustworthy, and yet we still mostly trust email.)

turquoisevar
0 replies
6d12h

We’re talking about accessing Apple’s servers, how would that be your own house?

out-of-ideas
0 replies
6d20h

dont forget to incude that a lot of folks do not realize that iMessage uses a different protocal for texting than simply texting; folks dont really always know or care about the program, they associate "icon" or "new version of icon" as texting, and use it to simply "send a text message"; not everybody is able to comprehend the difference between a simple "text message" and "imessage" vs other apps, ect

the advertisers/carriers also dont use "send an imessage" - its simply "unlimited texting" that gets stuck in folks brains (albeit i have not watched tv ads in some time, maybe its been updated to exact app names lol)

Terretta
0 replies
6d15h

First, it's not just security.

It's also, does this message cost money or not.

Blue sky, text freely. Green could cost money by hitting your SMS message bill.

This color difference matters even if you don't care about security at all.

. . .

Second:

That's pretty clear. If Apple's customers want to be able to use iMessage for such communications then (1) the Android user buys an Apple product, (2) a third party makes a cross-platform iMessage client, or (3) Apple open iMessage to other platforms. Apple is blocking on (2) and (3).

Option 4, run any other app that's on both platforms, which is what most of the world does anyway, including any iPhone user I know in the US who chats regularly with anyone International. For EU it's WhatsApp, China WeChat, and in USA it's privacy minded Signal, PTA parents Facebook Messenger, etc.

Given no cross platform is blocked, you'll see many iPhones do not have Messages in the launch bar, but one of those others.

This seems ... fine!

echelon
6 replies
6d20h

Apple customers have ample access to iMessage, after all.

It's not really fair that Apple gets to build snares around owning the most successful and important platform in modern civilization. This isn't an automobile where there are 50 alternative manufacturers, this is the "everything" device that handles your bills, employment, connections to loved ones, etc. And there's only one other choice of vendor in the United States.

Apple shouldn't be able to exercise their position (nor should Google) to own every aspect of human life built atop this connection. Mobile internet shouldn't belong to anyone. It shouldn't be taxed by anyone. And yet here we are.

One of the first rulings from antitrust I would expect is non-proprietary messaging protocols.

qeternity
2 replies
6d20h

This isn't an automobile where there are 50 alternative manufacturers

No, it’s exactly this. There are a ton of manufacturers all providing this product. It just so happens that Apple’s is one of the best, if not the best. And as has been mentioned, there are tons of secure messaging alternatives. It’s just that people prefer iMessage. This is not illegal or anticompetitive.

Imagine if someone claimed they should be let into an airport lounge of an airline they aren’t flying on, simply because their friends are there.

prmoustache
0 replies
6d11h

It just so happens that Apple’s is one of the best, if not the best.

I don't think you can explain it that way. Network effect is a thing and instant messaging preferences are very regional.

Also:

- With same products and quality Apple probably would probably have lower share in the USA if it was a chinese or iranian company.

- Regardless of its qualities the iphone has long been and is still a social class status symbol.

- The conversation on hn is skewed because iphones have slightly higher than 50% of market share in the USA, not 90% yet commenters on hn mention that their social circle is almost entirely made of iMessage users, which means the average hn commenter is of a much higher income and social class than the average US smartphone user. Using hn is mostly like entering a fancy suburb and only discuss with a limited subset of the population.

echelon
0 replies
6d18h

Apple or Google-controlled Android. Pick one.

Both tax everything in the world now. They're even becoming official government document providers. They're sinking their claws into all aspects of life and taxing and controlling them.

shreyansh_k
0 replies
6d20h

It's not really fair that Apple gets to build snares around owning the most successful and important platform in modern civilization.

On the flip side, Apple spent a lot of effort into developing their ecosystem. It doesn't seem fair to Apple that other companies get to piggyback on Apple's investments without Apple's permission. I'm not an Apple fan, but, that kind of sounds illegal. Imagine if you were to develop something useful and then someone comes around telling you that they deserve access to your awesome thing just because, even to your own detriment - even when they haven't spent the time and effort building it or contributing to the development process.

sbuk
0 replies
6d20h

One of the first rulings from antitrust I would expect is non-proprietary messaging protocols.

So not sideloading or App Store Alternatives, or setting a limit of the App Store fees, or advertising alternative payments?

(edit: I'm not suggesting any of there are or are not valid reason, just that it's laughable to suggest that messaging will be at, or near the top of the list. Especially from a 5 Eyes government!)

joshmanders
0 replies
6d20h

It's not really fair that Apple gets to build snares around owning the most successful and important platform in modern civilization.

When did Apple take ownership of the internet? Or are you referring to iOS? Which is actually not even the market leader at all?

My question is, if their ecosystem is soooo much better... Instead of fighting them to make it available on other devices why don't you, I don't know... Buy their devices?

unshavedyak
5 replies
6d20h

Apple customers have ample access to iMessage, after all. And as has been noted many, many times, there are many means of accessing secure cross-platform messaging.

In fairness, i am a 5+ device apple customer and i can't use it on my two primary desktops. I use Beeper to write texts on my primary computer.

Apple feels anti-me. I pay for products and unless i'm 100% into the ecosystem they fight me. Sure, they don't owe me an app on every platform i like - but they're also fighting me developing my own, too.

josephg
3 replies
6d20h

Yeah. I’ve got all sorts of Apple stuff in the house. One apple ecosystem piece I adore is being able to copy paste between my Apple devices. I’d love it if that worked from my Linux workstation too. C’mon, Apple.

fragmede
0 replies
6d19h

kdeconnect has an iOS app

advael
0 replies
6d18h

One workaround is something like barrier/synergy, if that still works on macos. Doesn't cover phones, but it's something

BenjiWiebe
0 replies
6d13h

Thanks to kde connect, I've been really enjoying shared clipboard between Windows, Linux, and my Android phone.

unsignedint
0 replies
6d17h

I discontinued using Apple products primarily due to their ecosystem-centric design philosophy. Many features appear tailored exclusively for users fully committed to Apple's ecosystem. While it's common for platforms to have exclusive features, Apple's approach feels more pronounced. In contrast, Google, for instance, offers Android-specific features, yet their services function well across various platforms, including mobile and desktop, and this compatibility extends to Apple devices as well.

wishfish
3 replies
6d20h

Speaking as an Apple customer, there are many times I wish iMessage was more open. My partner and some friends prefer Android. Would be great to use Messages with them. Plus, I'd love to have Messages on whatever desktop I'm using. Sure, I spend the majority of my time in MacOS. But, I've got Windows, Linux, and Chromebooks here in the house. Would be so much more convenient to have Messages on all platforms.

lotsofpulp
2 replies
6d20h

What is stopping you from using Whatsapp/Signal?

wishfish
0 replies
6d18h

Absolutely nothing. I already use alternative services for Android contacts. I just like iMessage and wish it was available on non-Apple hardware. Would be immensely more convenient.

nani8ot
0 replies
6d18h

As an Android user I'd rather use iMessage than WhatsApp, if I have to choose between proprietary messaging apps. Meta isn't a company I want to rely upon, but I'm forced to because of almost everyone using WhatsApp where I live.

i5-2520M
2 replies
6d20h

I have seen comments from iMessage users, and it is also logical to assume that they would prefer if there was a way to chat with their Android friends via iMessage while having most of the nice features. An Android iMessage app would only be bad for Apple, since they will no longer be able retain and convert users based on them being or not being able to comfortably message their friends.

joshmanders
1 replies
6d20h

As an Apple customer here's my thoughts on this:

1. Yes I would love if iMessage went Android and all my Android friends were able to react, thread convos, and all the other perks that iMessage allows, BUT the color of the message doesn't matter to me. I'm ok with the green bubbles too.

2. If iMessages was available on Android, I and every iPhone user I know wouldn't be like "finally, I can leave Apple!" iMessage is a perk not the main draw. The wider ecosystem and walled garden that non-Apple users apparently hate so much is not-surprisingly lovely to those of us all in on it.

i5-2520M
0 replies
6d6h

1. Sure, completely get this.

2. This might be the case for most people, but I have heard people did or do switch obly due to iMessage. To be clear I don't think there would be a huge exodus, but it is a major lock-in feature in the US. Or at least that is what I have read.

tiltowait
1 replies
6d20h

It's definitely a weird fight, especially when you consider Beeper wants to make money off of Apple's service without any compensation going Apple's way. It's hard for me to tell if the Beeper CEO is delusional or simply doing PR speak.

advael
0 replies
6d18h

"Interoperability is picking apple's pocket by allowing people cross-platform secure communication in a way that's usable to them" is a take that is bending over backwards to lick corporate boot. I get that part of apple's marketing is extreme brand loyalty, but your communications with non-ios users being less secure harms you as an ios user too, and the loss to apple is one of control over its customers' behavior more than anything else

gmm1990
1 replies
6d20h

Any chat I'm in that has at least one Android user is annoying. I'd prefer if the imessage features would be possible for those chats too.

JumpCrisscross
0 replies
6d20h

Any chat I'm in that has at least one Android user is annoying

Is this still the case since they stopped sending the "gmm1990 hearted XYZ" messages, and instead integrated the tapbacks? I really don't see a difference unless I'm in the air (and so cannot connect to the cellular network).

rahimnathwani
0 replies
6d18h

"Apple customers have ample access to iMessage"

I have an iPad Pro, a MBP, a MBA, and an iPhone X. I can send and receive iMessages on those devices.

But I cannot access iMessage on the devices I use most often:

- my main computer (a desktop running Ubuntu)

- my main phone (a Google Pixel)

I don't feel I have 'ample access to iMessage'.

prmoustache
0 replies
6d11h

Not really sure how this is anti-customer. Apple customers have ample access to iMessage, after all. And as has been noted many, many times, there are many means of accessing secure cross-platform messaging.

The point of a secure instant messaging protocol/app is to be able to communicate securely with people. If the company providing said app make it on purpose difficult for its customers to communicate with people, it is penalizing them.

We are not talking technical difficulties, we are talking unwillingness to let a secure channel stay open and making so that communication with people is less secure.

otachack
0 replies
6d20h

Agreed on there being access to other encrypted messaging apps. But that doesn't account for "app-fatigue" where people are fed up with getting yet another application (think Zoom, Meet, Slack, Signal, Discord, etc) and thus you have friction on getting people to use a new app.

For example: I've tried to get friends and family on Telegram and only succeeded in getting a fraction of them. I also feel that they're using it just to appease me and don't use it with others.

SMS/MMS/RCS/iMessage have default apps on phones and people tend to not seek replacement or simply can't (iMessage) This is what Beeper is trying to fix by introducing an app just for Android users to connect with iMessage users, thus challenging the Apple walled garden.

I haven't jumped on the Beeper wagon because I don't know the consequences of this tug-o-war. Would I lose secure messages if the iMessage rug gets pulled out while my number is registered? It seems I would unless I deregister my number. It just seems too volatile to me but I'm a fan of Pebble and wish the Beeper team+founders the best. I'll be keeping my eye on this.

edgineer
0 replies
6d20h

I'm an apple customer but I don't agree that I have ample access to iMessage. I use a MacBook and have an old iPhone lying around, but I use my android phone for daily messaging, including my family who use iPhones.

JoblessWonder
48 replies
6d18h

As I mentioned in the previous discussion[1], users are going to have to put up with the system going down... and I just don't see that happening. From the article: "It was losing messages during the outage and never being entirely certain they had been sent or received. There was a gathering on Saturday, and she had to double-check with a couple people about the details after showing up inadvertently early at the wrong spot."

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38533775

tshirthoodie
33 replies
6d17h

Apple's iMessage implementation loses messages all the time. It happens about once every month between my girlfriend and I.

I have also had iMesages be sent to the wrong recipient. In one ongoing case, my aunt and uncle frequently receive each other's iMessages, suggesting it's related to their group carrier plan but it's hard to say. The extended family all knows to use SMS instead, which reliably goes to the intended recipient. They are both retired and always together so they haven't reached the point of getting a new plan.

wrboyce
11 replies
6d16h

This has never, ever, happened to me and I have been using iMessage daily since its inception.

I call shenanigans.

jacquesm
5 replies
6d15h

So if something never ever happened to you it isn't true? That's a pretty self centered view of things.

wrboyce
4 replies
6d15h

I shouldn’t form an opinion based on my own experiences because it might upset you? That’s a pretty self centred view of things.

I could’ve expanded, I’m pretty much de facto “IT Support” for a lot of the friends/family I’ve spent those years communicating with using iMessage so I can pretty confidently say it has never happened to any of them either. I could go on to say that if it was a widespread issue this wouldn’t be the first we are hearing about it, and it absolutely would’ve been covered in some sort of tech news - possibly even the regular old news.

But sure, let’s go with self centred.

kelnos
2 replies
6d7h

That's not how experiences work. If someone says "I saw X" and you say "I didn't see X", that doesn't necessarily mean X doesn't exist, it just means you didn't see it. Sure, the person who saw X might have been hallucinating, but you don't have enough information to know either way.

It's a little weird to so strongly believe that a rare, intermittent bug (no one suggested it's "widespread") couldn't exist with a messaging service that gets a ton of traffic and has to support nearly a billion and a half people across the globe. May want to examine what biases lead you to having such a negative response to something like that.

Also consider that even if you have 1000 friends for whom you are "IT support guy", you've still interacted with fewer than 0.0001% of all iPhone users. You are several orders of magnitude off from a representative sample, especially if we're talking about a rare bug.

danaris
1 replies
6d3h

But tshirthoodie isn't just claiming "this extremely far-fetched things happened to me".

They're explicitly claiming "this happens all the time."

jacquesm
0 replies
6d

To his family.

jacquesm
0 replies
6d15h

You misread me: if something didn't happen to you that doesn't invalidate the GPs experience, it just means that your experiences differ. Now you have to figure out why they differ.

alexchantavy
2 replies
6d15h

Adding my own datapoint: I’ve absolutely had this happen on iPhone to iPhone where the message appeared to be sent on one device but the other received nothing

wrboyce
1 replies
6d15h

If I was being asked to debug this for someone I know, my first two questions would be “did your phone say delivered?” and “does the recipient have a Mac/iPad/etc that could’ve received the message?”; do you know the answer to either of these?

I worry that sounds accusatory but that’s not my intention, I’m curious and too tired to attempt to reword it.

JoblessWonder
0 replies
6d11h

Not person you responded to… but isn’t it safe to assume that iMessages are delivered to all devices on the account?

makeitdouble
1 replies
6d15h

https://www.coolmuster.com/ios-recovery/iphone-text-messages...

Doesn't feel like some rare issue. Googled it by curiosity, and there's a ton of "help" articles and support post on people randomly seeing messages disappear or not getting delivered.

JoblessWonder
0 replies
6d11h

Just a heads up, this article is SEO clickbait for a backup app and a lot of the others might be as well.

rgbrenner
7 replies
6d17h

iMessage is routed through apple's servers over TCP. So this is like saying: sometimes I go to google.com but it randomly loads bing.com... must be related to my group carrier plan

What data made you make that association? Seems unlikely. If that happens, then apple would have to be routing messages incorrectly, but that would be a massive bug/security issue... especially considering how E2EE works.

tshirthoodie
3 replies
6d16h

Yeah, who knows? I am only brainstorming. Ever since I discovered the abysmal state of Apple's customer service after having my iphone stolen last year, I feel confident we will never know.

frumper
2 replies
6d12h

I’m just curious what you think Apple should do for a stolen phone?

tshirthoodie
1 replies
6d11h

For a stolen phone with AppleCare+ insurance that has been paid for every month since purchasing the phone, they should at least offer a way to file a claim.

The only way to submit a claim was to click on a button in my icloud account that did not exist. I live in a big city and visited 3 Apple stores and spent about 15 hours in them in total, but none of them were able to help me get the claim filed so I had to give up. One of the supervisors did refund the ~$15/mo that I had paid for the AppleCare+ insurance, but I had to buy a new phone.

ryanwaggoner
0 replies
5d23h

AppleCare+ does not include theft coverage. For that you need to pay for "AppleCare+ with Theft and Loss", which I assume you didn't do: https://www.apple.com/support/products/iphone/

It's pretty easy to see why they wouldn't include theft + loss coverage unless you pay for it...

just2043
2 replies
6d14h

Yeah sounds more like the aunt and uncle once shared an Apple ID and then moved to seperate ones later.

tshirthoodie
0 replies
6d12h

Interesting. Do you know how they could fix it? I will send them this thread. They will love it.

mortenjorck
0 replies
6d13h

This is by far the most plausible explanation. iMessage’s biggest surface area for problems is multiple/migrated associated emails.

danaris
4 replies
6d16h

I use iMessage regularly, and have done so since it was first released.

I have never, to my knowledge, had a message sent to me lost (which I would have found out because my family members, who would have been the ones to try and fail to send it to me, would have mentioned it), nor lost a message I sent (except for obvious cases where I had insufficient signal, and the app clearly notified me of it).

I have never received a misdirected message, had mine misdirected, nor heard of anyone else doing either.

In all the criticisms of iMessage I've seen recently—in this Beeper situation, and a little longer ago when Apple decided to support RCS—I have seen no one else say that they've had issues like you describe.

Obviously, this doesn't mean that these things can't happen. But it does suggest that Your Experiences Are Not Universal.

trws
2 replies
6d16h

The most common case I know of for what looks like misdirection is having one contact with multiple iMessage phone numbers, especially if multiple contacts share one or more of them. Real world example, my wife and I each have both a work iPhone and a personal iPhone. If both are listed in a single contact, iOS will “helpfully” merge the iMessages from both on a sender’s device, but not on the receiver’s. It’s very difficult to tell which device you’re sending to in this case, and can be changed by the other party if they send you a message and you reply. If you didn’t know what was going on, that would look a whole lot like a message going to the wrong device or even recipient in some cases. As a result I literally have separate contacts for my wife to avoid the problem, the UX is otherwise really abysmal.

the_mar
1 replies
6d16h

Yeah, that’s how contacts work. What would you like to happen instead?

angoragoats
0 replies
6d14h

This is how iMessage works, not contacts, and as a user of the iPhone since its launch in 2007 this is surprisingly unexpected to me. I would expect each separate email/phone number to have its own conversation.

kelnos
0 replies
6d7h

I don't think anyone's claiming the GP's experience is universal. A quick search suggests that there are just under 1.5 billion iPhone users in the world. That's a lot of messages going back and forth. Anyone who's ever worked with distributed systems can tell you that the idea that a message never gets dropped is just hilarious and absurd.

I expect message loss is actually a pretty regular occurrence, in absolute numbers. I wouldn't be surprised if thousands or even hundreds of thousands or millions of messages are dropped every year. But in the end that means that the delivery rate would be something like 99.99999999999%, which is actually pretty damn good (and it probably isn't that good; I'm just throwing around numbers here).

omeze
2 replies
6d12h

Youre being downvoted but I also lose a message every few months between my girlfriend and I. We both have relatively new iPhones and exclusively use iMessage so I do think its some rare protocol bug.

tshirthoodie
1 replies
6d12h

I'm surprised so many people claim they haven't experienced it and I wonder how many have and just don't know.

omeze
0 replies
6d4h

Ya I think most just would not notice between friends. But we’ve compared our iMessages and we aren’t doing anything weird like sharing apple IDs. Not a huge deal so it’s whatever, but if any Apple engineers read this: plz fix

blahgeek
1 replies
6d16h

Are they sharing the same iCloud ID or something? That's the most likely scenario to me

tshirthoodie
0 replies
6d16h

My gen-z cousins have promised me that isn't the case.

rezonant
0 replies
6d16h

I could believe losing messages. I cannot believe wrong recipient. One of these is a service reliability issue and the other is an insanely unlikely bug.

And what are the chances that the actual recipient ends up being the spouse of your expected recipient? Sounds more like they logged into each other's phones or something.

suggesting it's related to their group carrier plan

Extremely doubtful it has anything to do with their plan. iMessage is over the top: only the first SMS activation message has anything to do with your carrier -- after that it's all sent through Apple's servers.

danielheath
0 replies
6d15h

One obvious cause comes to mind: If your aunt and uncle use the same apple login for both phones, they'll often get each others imessages.

JoblessWonder
0 replies
6d11h

Gotta check Settings -> Messages -> Send & Receive.

I would bet there is at least one overlap or misconfiguration there.

rezonant
10 replies
6d12h

Interestingly, if you break your iPhone on vacation and buy a phone that is not an iPhone so that you can still be contacted until you get home to your favorite Apple Store, you are also losing messages, assuming you forget to go through Apple's iMessage deregistration system. Really the design of iMessage is the problem.

thethimble
5 replies
6d11h

Really? Doesn’t iMessage fall back to sms if the receiver doesn’t ack? At least that’s what the UX feels like.

kelnos
2 replies
6d7h

I think that's if iMessage can't reach Apple's servers. Otherwise that wouldn't make sense; simply being without a cell/wifi signal, or having your phone off, for a few hours, would mean anyone messaging you would be sending a bunch of SMS fallback messages.

msh
1 replies
6d5h

It is how it works, after a certain timeout where it can't be delivered to a device it will fallback to SMS. The exact length of the timeout is not public.

See https://discussions.apple.com/thread/8063349?sortBy=best

Volundr
0 replies
6d1h

I have no idea if this is true or not, but I'll note that isn't Apple saying that. It's a random user on an Apple forum.

sn0wf1re
0 replies
5d23h

Yes it does fallback. There are two situations where it does so

1. The sender cannot connect to the imessage server 2. The receiver does not connect to the imessage server, on any of the devices registered to receive at that particular address.

I know both methods happen since I didn't used to have data and I would receive SMSs when someone sent me an imessage and I was out and about.

JoblessWonder
0 replies
6d11h

Not OP, but I believe it falls back to SMS if there isn’t a response from Apple’s servers, not the end user’s device. In this scenario the iMessages are sitting there waiting for a registered device to check in to send them to. (Same thing that happens if your battery dies. iMessages go into a void until some place to deliver it to.)

msh
1 replies
6d5h

Only if you have another iOS/macOS device receiving them at home.

If you don't receive iMessages it will automatically fall back to SMS (unless the sender specifically turned that feature off).

rezonant
0 replies
5d15h

If you register your phone number to iMessage without any other iMessage receivers and then turn off that iPhone, messages sent for an extended period of time will continue to be queued for delivery in iMessage. In order for other iPhones to start falling back to SMS you need to manually deregister. In Google Messages and other RCS clients, by default it will give you a "Message not delivered" message indicating your message never made it to the handset. You then have an opportunity to manually resend that pending message via SMS. You can disable this behavior though if you prefer to use the two-check delivery receipt information to determine when your message hits the handset.

While neither mechanism is perfect, the RCS model treats lack of delivery to the handset as a potential problem, whereas iMessage ignores it. iMessage assumes your phone is just off, which for most people you are texting, is an unlikely scenario.

For users who actively turn off their device for certain activities, you have the opportunity to just wait, and when it arrives the error will clear, or send it as SMS and it will pick it up when the handset does turn on. But while the message is in flight for any length of time, the UI treats it as "something is wrong".

This means whenever you return to the conversation to check for a response or text more, you'll be reminded strongly that the message never arrived for them. And you always have the opportunity to resend on SMS during that time.

j16sdiz
1 replies
6d11h

Don't need to go to Apple store.

It is self-seviced https://selfsolve.apple.com/deregister-imessage/

rezonant
0 replies
6d8h

No the idea is that you forgot to deregister yourself while still on vacation and using a non-iPhone, the Apple Store bit was the "get a new iPhone" part after your vacation is over.

And what you link to is what I meant by

assuming you forget to go through Apple's iMessage deregistration system.
rpmisms
2 replies
6d14h

Doesn't bother me at all. I'm ok with losing a text or two to help bring regulatory pressure against Apple to un-wall the garden so I can use it again.

vachina
1 replies
6d13h

I'm ok with losing a text or two

That’s the whole point. You’re using it for non-critical things.

rpmisms
0 replies
6d12h

Yes, but I'm happy to help provide critical mass.

cdme
32 replies
6d20h

I miss the days when chat wasn't fragmented across apps and platforms or could at least be unified in apps like Adium. Having to have a different app installed for myriad different contacts is, at best, irritating.

rrreese
15 replies
6d18h

I’m baffled as to when this time was? Back in the day there was ICQ, Yahoo Chat, MSN Messenger (and no doubt a dozen I forget).

Before the there there the proprietary networks (Aol, CompuServe and others) along with BBS, IRC, Newsgroups, etc.

I literally don’t remember a time in my life where messaging hasn’t been fragmented.

paulryanrogers
5 replies
6d18h

A brief period (~2008-2015) when XMPP had momentum and federation was trendy, if incomplete.

Apps like Trillian, Pidgin (Gaim), Adium actually allowed chatting across many platforms on the client side. To some extent they still can, with add-ons.

nextos
1 replies
6d17h

This was a great time, and I indeed miss XMPP, with proper federation to lots of different servers, including Google Talk, and Jingle videocalls!

Modern XMPP is really great, Conversations is a fantastic client, supports E2E encryption, is open source, and makes minimal use of resources.

stavros
0 replies
6d17h

But there's nobody on it :(

sroussey
0 replies
6d18h

So did iMessage back then.

mcpeepants
0 replies
6d18h

Trillian was a fantastic piece of software

kuschku
0 replies
6d9h

That's precisely what the primary Beeper Cloud and the old Element One product are for. Just connect to your Signal, Discord, Facebook, WhatsApp, iMessage accounts and chat with all of them in one single app.

Beeper Cloud and Element One do this through matrix bridges, but Beeper has been trying to move this entirely into the client again, which is what Beeper Mini is an experiment for.

If Beeper Mini succeeds, it'll soon also support Signal, WhatsApp, and Facebook Messenger. If Apple succeeds, messaging will remain fragmented.

jedberg
5 replies
6d18h

2001, when Adium launched. It pretty much had every messaging app that anyone was on.

I used it exclusively for years. It supported all those things (or I should say if someone had multiple ways to get to them, Adium supported at least one of them).

ljm
3 replies
6d18h

Adium was a total lifesaver on Mac since there was never an official MSN messenger client there.

Back then a lot of services also used XMPP but that has been readily abandoned - Slack used to do XMPP, doesn't any more. Google used to do XMPP, doesn't any more...

I suppose one reason for it is E2E encryption.

jen20
0 replies
6d17h

since there was never an official MSN messenger client there.

There certainly was: https://www.macintoshrepository.org/989-msn-messenger-2-5-1

alwayslikethis
0 replies
6d18h

I think their switch away from XMPP predates E2EE and some of them still aren't using E2EE, so that's not the real reason. XMPP has good E2EE now with OMEMO though.

albert180
0 replies
6d18h

That's also possible with XMPP and Matrix. They just liked to get away with closing their fences

mnutt
0 replies
6d18h

Adium was a very well-designed mac app that I used for many years. All of its messaging connectivity was due to its use of libpurple (formerly libgaim).

xyst
0 replies
6d18h

Probably when e-mail was the primary form of digital communication.

Or maybe referring to RL. You know, actually talking to someone on phone or in-person. Although then you have to deal with different accents, dialects, languages, and even regions specific lexicon.

standardUser
0 replies
6d17h

Yes, and there was Trillian, which was compatible with all of ICQ, Yahoo Chat, MSN Messenger and others.

But because Apple decided to make their messaging system a marketing tool instead of an interoperable app, we don't get to have a Trillian equivalent today.

brandon272
0 replies
6d17h

Back in the day there was ICQ, Yahoo Chat, MSN Messenger (and no doubt a dozen I forget).

Yes, and you could combine them all into a single multi-protocol messaging app like Adium, Trillian, Gaim, Pidgin, etc. to provide a single convenient unified experience.

Shawnj2
8 replies
6d19h

IIRC that is the original goal of beeper, to act as a universal messenger front end

MichaelZuo
7 replies
6d19h

So the end result will be dozens of 'universal' 'standards'?

Gud
2 replies
6d18h

I think in the end, whoever chooses to block these apps(Trillian, Pidgin, etc) too hard will be the ones left in the dust.

mvdtnz
1 replies
6d18h

Evidently that isn't the case.

tshirthoodie
0 replies
6d17h

yet

stetrain
0 replies
6d18h

A client that can interop with multiple services isn't adding a new standard.

alwayslikethis
0 replies
6d18h

They are using Matrix. You can use any Matrix client to interact with Beeper's services.

Spivak
0 replies
6d18h

The end result will likely be a few apps that do the legwork to beat the various messaging platforms into some common denominator feature set and give you a single pane of glass.

Unsiloing messaging isn't some quick fix. It would be like saying "we have all these forums like HN, Reddit, Twitter, SpaceHey, Facebook they should all share a global identity system and be able to be used all by a single app with the same APIs." Like we can't even make a generic ActivityPub client.

AnthonyMouse
0 replies
6d18h

If clients supporting multiple protocols become popular they could default to a sensible open protocol. Which, as the default in the popular app(s), would become the most widely used protocol. People can switch at their leisure because the app supports both, but over time the users transition because it's the default.

Since the old and proprietary protocols are only sustained by the network effect, they lose users, and eventually support for them gets dropped.

It's a method of transitioning from a collection of proprietary systems with their own network effects to an open one, by temporarily supporting both. For obvious reasons the operators of the proprietary systems don't want to be subject to that competition, which is they same reason they shouldn't be allowed to shut it out.

vikramkr
2 replies
6d18h

It's interesting to simultaneously see takes complaining about fragmentation and apple having monopoly power in this thread. In sympathetic to the fragmentation take honestly, apple doesn't stop you from installing Whatsapp, but it's an interesting situation where it's folks who opted into a closed system that are complaining about the system being closed

willseth
0 replies
6d17h

where it's folks who opted into a closed system that are complaining about the system being closed

The folks complaining are a vocal minority of Android users. Everyone else doesn't care.

enragedcacti
0 replies
6d17h

It's interesting to simultaneously see takes complaining about fragmentation and apple having monopoly power in this thread.

They are both issues! Fragmentation in messaging is a real problem in the US, and iMessage has for a decade been the closest to a solution for iPhone users. Users' frustration with fragmentation pushes them into the app where 1) they know the message will get there, and 2) there's a 50% chance the experience won't suck. iMessage's existence in a fragmented market and refusal to interoperate all but guarantees the fragmentation will continue.

m463
1 replies
6d17h

apple did the "embrace, extend, extinguish" with this.

the original apple messages app did AOL messenger and others.

then it gradually forced you off of them into imessage.

jonhohle
0 replies
6d17h

The main services iChat supported - AIM and Yahoo Messenger are gone. Google Chat no longer supports XMPP. I don't know anything about Facebook Messenger. Increasingly messaging services became siloed.

lapinot
0 replies
6d20h

Couldn't you have said "compartmentalized", or "dominated by hostile silos" or anything else that doesn't involve comparison of the state of online chatting with wars that have killed humans? I agree things were nice with adium.

SeanAnderson
0 replies
6d18h

Pidgin supports a good number of chat clients :) They lost the battle for a while there when walled gardens went up, but then won later on and regained support.

https://www.pidgin.im/plugins/?publisher=all&query=&type=

No iMessage, of course, but you might find it helpful to see the list of supported clients.

thot_experiment
21 replies
6d20h

Is it common for people to use texts in 2023 in your social circle? I think I've been texted once this year. I mean obviously people care about this to some extent otherwise this app wouldn't exist but in my experience when I meet someone they'll give me insta or discord, unless they're a tryhard and then it's always signal (blegh).

EDIT: not sure i'm being downvoted? i'm genuinely curious because i never use SMS or iMessage myself and haven't for some years so this seemed very niche to me, even randos i meet out in the world all seem to just chat on discord and insta (I'm in the bay area but most of my friends are not tech bros)

asfasfo
5 replies
6d19h

SMS is very popular in the US for historical reasons. Many users in other countries (like India) moved to products like Whatsapp because their cell phone plans charged per message but US phone plans have had free SMS pricing for years so we've never had a push here. iPhone is market leader in the US so iMessageis also heavily used since its default for SMS between iOS users.

ck425
4 replies
6d18h

Interesting. In UK it was common (and still has I think?) for contracts/deals to include lots of free SMS texts but even then most people have readily moved to WhatsApp, Messenger etc.

In my mind texts quickly became like voicemails, something older people would use cause that's what they know but not something I'd want to use regularly if given the option.

asfasfo
1 replies
6d18h

The UK rolled probably rolled out free SMS texts later than the US; the US was one of the first markets that rolled it out. I don't know when whatsapp rolled out there but I'm guessing it pre dates unlimited SMS being ubiquitious.

iMessage has pretty much the same feature set as Whatsapp so US users don't really have a reason to migrate at this point.

ck425
0 replies
6d18h

We had free texts before iPhones nevermind WhatsApp. Not unlimited but hundreds of SMSs a month was common. That said another thread here implied that carriers included MMS messages in free texts, not just SMS? If so that might explain as MMS aren't free in my experience.

SOLAR_FIELDS
1 replies
6d18h

Part of the reason UK switched over quickly is because of much higher international texting needs which these apps also neatly solve. Your average American just straight up does not need international messaging capability

wrboyce
0 replies
6d16h

I’d find this surprising! I’m probably the only person I know who frequently messages (via iMessage nonetheless) with foreign contacts. In addition I’m pretty sure cross-state comms in the USA are treated like international comms are in Europe but I could well be wrong on this point (and as per xkcd[1] I’m sure we’ll find out soon if I am)!

[1] https://xkcd.com/386/

that_guy_iain
4 replies
6d20h

You‘ve just given multiple different text messengers that you use to text message when asking if people still text. Yes, people do. Non technically minded are very big users for the default text messaging apps.

thot_experiment
3 replies
6d20h

text message means SMS in my dialect, sorry

madeofpalk
2 replies
6d18h

iMessage is not SMS.

thot_experiment
1 replies
6d18h

ok sorry mr pedant, text message to me means the default tied to your number way of communicating on your phone

that_guy_iain
0 replies
6d7h

Like whatsapp, signal, telegram, etc?

heywire
2 replies
6d20h

Almost 100% of my chat messages are through iMessage. The only ones that aren’t are group or individual threads with Android users (which btw have never seemed to be an issue. Reactions and gifs all seem to work fine, albeit in reduced quality compared to messages received via iMessage). Every once in a while someone will message me on Facebook, but that’s usually just to share a funny meme or something. I don’t have WhatsApp, signal, telegram, or any of those even installed.

40’s, male, Ohio, software engineer, for reference.

ETA: this doesn’t count work, where we use teams and slack, but I don’t have those loaded on my phone.

BobaFloutist
1 replies
6d17h

Reactions and gifs work fine for you. They work poorly for the android user. When a friend on an iphone heart emoji reacts to a text, on my end I get a text that says "<user> loved a text".

It's obviously not a huge deal, but it's pretty badly executed.

jvolkman
0 replies
6d16h

Switch to Google Messages and these messages are handled better.

recursive
0 replies
6d18h

Yes. I use SMS, and don't really use any of the alternatives. Everyone I know uses it too, and I don't really have a reason to try to push anything else, which would probably require installing an app.

pb7
0 replies
6d20h

Yes, it's the only way we communicate. Instagram for strangers, iMessage for friends.

nerdjon
0 replies
6d20h

Honestly it drives me insane when I keep messages out of just texting.

I have a couple friends that just want to use Discord and not everything is together in the same app on all of my devices (iMessage,including just texting is on all of my apple devices).

I remember desperately trying to fix this with… what was that big multi client app for Mac years ago? Hate chats not being in the same app.

Edit: found it. Adium! Which shockingly has been updated in 2021.

mminer237
0 replies
6d20h

I'm 28, and texting is the primary method of communication for virtually everyone I know. The only exceptions are that I know two techy people who use Google Chat and a few people who use Facebook Messenger (mostly because they don't have my number). I've never met a single person in my life who uses Instagram, Discord, or Signal for 1-to-1 messaging.

luhn
0 replies
6d20h

Very much so, texting is my primary method of remote communication. Discord, WhatsApp, and FB messenger are for various group chats. Instagram is almost exclusively for sending dog memes to my wife.

lazzlazzlazz
0 replies
6d20h

Almost everyone I know uses Signal regularly, then iMessage after that. Discord comes up in certain settings. Instagram sounds like a pretty awful place to remain connected with someone.

burkaman
0 replies
6d18h

Every American I know primarily uses texts and every non-American primarily uses Whatsapp. People also use Instagram and Discord but for other purposes, not when they just want to send one or two people a simple message.

bastard_op
21 replies
6d20h

Because of course they did, they like that children make fun of their peers that have a green message vs. a blue, and that's exactly what they want. They're like "ew, are you poor and can't afford a $1200 iphone?"

It is now a petty, but prevalent status symbol of being better than others, namely perceived "poor" or otherwise lesser android users.

lotsofpulp
9 replies
6d20h

Brand new iPhones have been available for $430 on apple.com for many years now.

And most young minimum wage employees with very little money and no "status" also use iPhones.

It is not a signal of poor/status, it is a signal of weird/not weird, without commenting on the validity of that, of course.

For example, people do not opt out of dating Android users because they think Android users are poor, they opt out because they think Android users have a higher likelihood of being sufficiently "weird" such that they do not want to engage.

quartesixte
8 replies
6d20h

That’s also entirely USA centric and a byproduct of everyone sticking to SMS-phone number systems to chat. It drives me nuts.

WhatsApp. WeChat. Line. Kakao. Facebook Messenger. Most of the world has switched to these dedicated apps.

Only glimmer of hope is that gen-z/gen-alpha is really into Discord (at least all the ones I know). Might finally bring down the iMessage group chats.

paulmd
4 replies
6d19h

Discord is actually an interesting analogy because they share apple’s overall philosophy here. Discord doesn’t absolutely firewall themselves with attestation/etc but they will absolutely ban you for using alternative clients like Discord Advanced if they notice you behaving differently from an official client on the API. Some of the things the discord advanced client can do like animated smilies or cross-server smilies are things that discord has locked away behind a paywall (with no real technical basis) and that’s in conflict with how a small minority of users want to interact with the platform.

Should discord be forced to interoperate? Bearing in mind that of course forcing them open will undercut their whole business model - but that whole model is built on gouging consumers for trivial technical features that cost nothing to implement or support.

Similarly, while there is choice in the market (just like apple and android), it still doesn’t change the network-effect problem. If my friends are on discord, and I’m left in some group sms side chat, that’s not really a substitute, right?

Now layer on 30 years of brand warrior sports-team mentality and abrasive interactions in both directions, and you’ve roughly got the iMessage problem. But of course everyone likes discord…

I mean why shouldn’t I get to use discord for free like everyone else? And I also should get the paywalled features since it’s an arbitrary and abusive paywall and the environment has been designed to tacitly funnel you into using them. Isn’t that like, super abusive?

But we like discord…

dishsoap
1 replies
6d19h

I don't think many people actually like discord, they just feel compelled to use it because their friends use it

unsignedint
0 replies
6d18h

Discord excels particularly in group communications involving more than a dozen people. Its ability to organize access levels through roles and topics is a standout feature, offering significant advantages over other platforms. However, these features may not be as crucial in casual conversations among friends.

kuschku
0 replies
6d8h

And that's also why Beeper supports Discord in their primary product (see https://www.beeper.com/cloud#w-node-_2123a13e-0a0b-7de3-82e5... )

ewoodrich
0 replies
6d18h

At least Discord is available on every platform I use regularly (MacOS, Windows, iOS, Android). That alone is a massive step up from iMessage lock-in for me.

popularonion
2 replies
6d19h

This whole “controversy” is because of Americans collectively stamping their feet and throwing a tantrum refusing to install WhatsApp or Signal. It’s really quite incredible.

But I share your view about Discord, I think it’s one app positioned to be the “American WeChat” in a few years if they don’t screw it up.

recursive
0 replies
6d18h

No one has even asked me to install WhatsApp or Signal or anything. I'm not sure where the tantrum is happening. I mean, if someone wanted to send me a message, I'd ask them to do it with SMS first, since I already use that. But I've never seen any evidence of any tantrums.

doublerabbit
0 replies
6d18h

I think it’s one app positioned to be the “American WeChat” in a few years if they don’t screw it up.

Yeah, not going to happen. Discord is turning in to a dog and pony show.

ToucanLoucan
6 replies
6d20h

Android users have been banging this drum about the iPhone supremacists for an actual decade at this point and it so, so goddamn tiring.

I buy iPhones for a number of reasons:

- Ecosystem which has been explained at length so often you'd have to have your head under a rock to not know what it means

- Ease of transfer of data between phones/tablets and replacements, along with constant sync

- Excellent build quality

- The OS is consistently good (not perfect, but good) and devices in general have a long life from purchase to replacement. I just recently had to FINALLY replace my gen 4 Watch with an SE, that I originally purchased in 2018. That's FIVE YEARS of daily use.

"An Android" by contrast can be fucking anything from a $20 Aliexpress special farted out with spare parts from NIGYEHO Ltd. and an ancient version of the OS that barely runs on the hardware, to a mid-tier perfectly acceptable phone that will no doubt be nearly bricked in the event you try and update the OS, to a multi-thousand-dollar premiere Samsung powerhouse that would utterly spank most iPhones at most functions and will probably last you ten years if you take good care of it. And what irritates the shit out of me is Android users that treat the last one like you get it at the price of the first one, and then call Apple users elitist for buying a very similarly priced phone.

It is truly mind-bending to me how effective Google's marketing has been to paint themselves constantly as the scrappy underdog fighting the conformist and snobby Apple fanbase, which is not to say there aren't any pricks who swing their iPhone around like it makes them hot shit, there almost certainly are, but to say that's the norm is completely outside my and anyone I know's experience of the matter.

skeaker
2 replies
6d17h

What makes your anecdote more valuable than GP's? You may not know anyone who does the "snobby conformist" act, but GP does. Why should I care that you haven't experienced it when someone who actually has experienced it tells me so?

Moreover, since you admit those people exist, why wouldn't you support interoperability between iMessage and other platforms? It would only benefit you as a user since it would allow you to message your friends that are on Androids, and wouldn't be to your detriment at all since you're not doing the "snobby" act yourself. Where is your defensiveness coming from? It sounds like you're on the same team as GP.

ToucanLoucan
1 replies
6d14h

What makes your anecdote more valuable than GP's? You may not know anyone who does the "snobby conformist" act, but GP does. Why should I care that you haven't experienced it when someone who actually has experienced it tells me so?

Arguably you should care about neither then.

Moreover, since you admit those people exist, why wouldn't you support interoperability between iMessage and other platforms?

There is interoperability. SMS texting is built into the same app. No, you don't get reactions... because that's not supported on SMS. No, you don't get replies for the same reason. However everything that is possible in the SMS standard is implemented in Messages completely normally, the sole difference being the chat color, and personally I'm fine with that because it lets me know immediately that Messages only features are going to be a no-go for this particular conversation.

Where is your defensiveness coming from?

Implicit in the notion that iPhones are merely fashion accessories is that those who buy them are foolish. You're free to say I'm getting defensive, I wouldn't say you're entirely wrong. But if you really want to talk anecdotes, I have pages upon pages I could write of various experiences of having my credentials as an network engineer questioned because I don't have an android device or that I prefer a Mac computer.

skeaker
0 replies
6d13h

Okay? Again, you're agreeing on every point except an unrelated anecdote. I agree that getting jerked around for using Apple stuff is dumb too. Do you even take any issue with Beeper Mini or did I misread somewhere?

SpaghettiCthulu
1 replies
6d16h

- Excellent build quality

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IS0SItAzEXg

Keep drinking your kool-aid.

ToucanLoucan
0 replies
6d14h

Yeah I'd be willing to bet open flame on pretty much any smartphone screen is going to cause damage. I get around that by not lighting my phone on fire.

richwater
0 replies
6d17h

Beautifully put.

dann0
1 replies
6d20h

Did you just unironically use a “would someone think of the children?” argument?

Of all the interesting points in this situation, this is not even close to being relevant

sbuk
0 replies
6d20h

The whole green-bubble debate is essentially an appeal to emotion...

quartesixte
0 replies
6d20h

namely perceived ”poor”

This is particularly bonkers to me given how expensive Samsung flagships are, but I guess Android occupying the sub-$600 range really enforces in children (physical or mental) that Android = Poor

PrimeMcFly
0 replies
6d20h

Which is so stupid when so many people have iphones that are handmedowns and many Androids users are much more knowledgeable with regard to technology and have much more impressive devices.

cunidev
14 replies
6d6h

It seems like the effort Apple is putting in stopping this is an indicator of how many people buy iPhones just for being in their iMessage circles. Which is only possible as long as Apple keeps snubbing RCS and making messaging painful to non-iPhone users.

If, say, a random cheap Motorola with Beeper could keep them in the same groups as before, Apple would probably lose a (small) chunks of its clients.

delta_p_delta_x
7 replies
6d6h

how many people buy iPhones just for being in their iMessage circles

This is news only in the US. Literally everywhere else in the world (where iPhones don't have a supermajority market share), third-party apps like WhatsApp, Telegram, Line, WeChat, Facebook Messenger, etc have been used for the past decade, with no problems whatsoever. My own WhatsApp account has been active for a decade, with chats going back exactly that far.

msh
4 replies
6d5h

I think saying its US only is oversimplifying, its at least also true in some european markets.

leonheld
3 replies
6d5h

Which ones? I have friends (young and old) all over Europe and everyone uses WhatsApp. Everywhere I've been in Europe defaults to WhatsApp, even for business communication.

Like, it's n=1, but still, my experience is quite broad.

msh
0 replies
6d2h

At least in my experience most of the nordics is mostly iPhones and WhatsApp is somewhat rare.

jeppebemad
0 replies
6d4h

In Denmark hardly anyone uses WhatsApp by default. No business I’ve seen uses it. Android is common.

I’m currently in Indonesia however, and it’s universal both privately and corporately.

InCityDreams
0 replies
6d2h

EU: I'm trying to get everyone i know onto signal. Hard fight. I tried whatsapp for a month and it was so facebooky (that I also got rid of yeeaaars ago, after trying for a month) that I deleted it. Whatsapp is very common, though and I am gradually being pushed out of various communications (my doctor, for example, pharmacies). At least I don't have to bugger about with Teams which is the requirement for my kids' schools. Amicable divorce, but I don't have that on my phone, unlike my ex (who hates it).

redwall_hp
1 replies
6d3h

My experience is that third party applications are the norm in the US, too. Everyone I know uses Facebook Messenger or Discord, and that situation has been the norm for at least a decade (and Discord itself is nearing a decade of existence now). Facebook Messenger is easily the default multi-platform option.

90% of my Messages app is SMS threads, and the vast majority of my messaging activity is Slack, Discord and Facebook Messenger.

joshmanders
0 replies
6d3h

I would probably go as far as saying that this is only the "norm" on HN or in crowds where they think people spend $1200+ on a device just for the color of text bubbles.

My teenager and his friends don't even use iMessage, they use Snapchat almost exclusively to communicate. Someone messages them on iMessage they read it and then respond on Snapchat.

timmg
2 replies
6d5h

The thing that bothers me is that Apple’s actions hurt iPhone owners. Making it harder for them to communicate with non-iPhones is a bad experience. Intentionally making their product worse to encourage lock-in is anti-user.

I’m oddly surprised that iPhone owners are ok with this.

soerxpso
1 replies
6d3h

Most iPhone owners are unaware that it's intentional on Apple's part, and are lead to believe that other devices just aren't sophisticated enough to make the bubbles blue.

timmg
0 replies
5d17h

That's a pretty good theory/explanation, tbh.

redwall_hp
1 replies
6d3h

If any company with a restricted service exposed to the internet found someone illegally gaining access by spoofing device IDs or API keys, the engineers who noticed would immediately shut down access and inform management, so they can run it up the chain to legal. There need be no other motivation beyond preventing illegal access to a computer system.

I doubt Beeper Mini is on the radar of anyone high up at Apple. Some engineering team responsible for the services that back iMessage is just spotting and dealing with one of probably many malicious actors.

RCS support has also already been announced by Apple for 2024.

everforward
0 replies
6d1h

This is simply not true. Frankly, my first instinct would be to let it go if they're not causing issues. I certainly wouldn't start swinging the ban hammer around without knowing that the hell the traffic is.

It could be a bug in our client code, and I could be cutting off paying customers. It could be some weird and/or poorly written software by a customer. It could be some bizarre WAN accelerator issue at some giant company with real devices.

I would presume that at least someone at Apple knows that the traffic is from Beeper, and what Beeper is. I would expect that it hit the desk of a mid-tier Director at least (would you or your manager be comfortable implementing heuristic blocking without telling a director?).

It still may not be a strategic decision, but I wouldn't assume that decision makers aren't aware of what's going on.

dwighttk
0 replies
6d6h

Or it is an indicator of Apple wanting to keep it secure

wolpoli
7 replies
6d20h

MSN Messenger played a similar cat-and-mouse game with AOL Instant Messenger long time ago. Unlike MSN Messenger which used this publicity to grow their own market share, I am not sure what's the end game for Beeper.

notnmeyer
4 replies
6d18h

attention? this has brought beeper _tremendous_ publicity. i think it’s naive to think that beeper didn’t expect this—its win-win for them no matter what.

they could and so they did.

madeofpalk
3 replies
6d18h

Win-win no matter what? An extremely likely scenario is that Beeper becomes completely defunct, and Apple has no legal or regulartory pressure applied to them. What's the win for Beeper here?

sroussey
0 replies
6d18h

It’s better than a message app that no one knows about.

notnmeyer
0 replies
6d15h

beeper is more than beeper mini.

commoner
0 replies
6d18h

Beeper (Beeper Cloud) is a cross-platform stack that supports multiple messaging systems (not just iMessage) and has been in development for years.[1] This is different from Beeper Mini, which is a recently launched Android-exclusive app that only supports SMS/MMS and iMessage.[2]

The release of Beeper Mini certainly gained publicity for Beeper Cloud, and I don't see why Beeper Mini would cause Beeper Cloud to go defunct.

[1] Beeper Cloud: https://www.beeper.com/cloud

[2] Beeper Mini: https://blog.beeper.com/p/introducing-beeper-mini-get-blue

paulddraper
0 replies
6d20h

The end game for Beeper is a significant presence on the most popular OS on the planet.

I don't think their interested in replacing iMessage directly, if that's your question.

DistractionRect
0 replies
6d17h

I suspect they're angling to be bought out. Whether they maintain it, or kill it, they're likely just hoping to survive long enough that Apple decides buying them out is easier.

unsigner
7 replies
6d10h

These comments mention spam a lot as a reason to stick with iMessage.

What kind of spam are people (presumably in the US) getting outside of iMessage? I’m in the EU, I get very little SMS spam (mostly for telecom’s clumsy attempts to find more ways to monetize me).

I also have Viber, Telegram, and FB messenger, and the spam is virtually zero on Viber (less than an “offer” a month, and it’s from the likes of Coca Cola, not herbal viagra) and literally zero on the others.

Is spam significantly worse elsewhere?

rjst01
0 replies
6d6h

Every couple of weeks I will be added to a spam Telegram group, maybe once a month I'll get a spam or scam whatsapp.

I have had the occasional iMessage spam too but haven't seen that in years.

paulgb
0 replies
6d7h

I don’t see how it would make a difference anyway; iMessage will still display the regular SMS messages, so iMessage users are still susceptible to spam. (I checked and as an iMessage user I had about 10 in the last month)

pashky
0 replies
6d8h

I'm getting somewhat noticeable (once every few weeks) phishing attempts on Telegram and Instagram, less frequent on WhatsApp. On Instagram they sit unobtrusively in "requests" and disappear after some time, in Telegram and Whatsapp they do pop up and have to be deleted.

lgbr
0 replies
6d8h

I don't have hard numbers, but I can say that spam on both sides of the ocean exist. In the US, we get a lot of SMS spam targeted at homeowners, pestering them about selling their property, since there's a lot of open data about property ownership. In Germany, there's frequently spam pretending to be one of the major shipping companies (DHL for example) or the local customs office (Zoll) saying you have a package that couldn't be delivered and to click on a link. I've found the source for this data to be customer data leaks.

So yes, spam is a serious concern. WhatsApp spam exists as well, but since there's a central authority, unlike with SMS, it's a lot harder to avoid being shutdown.

kelnos
0 replies
6d7h

I think everyone's spam experience on the various platforms just tends to vary a lot. Some people see iMessage spam, while others swear they haven't ever gotten one. Ditto for all the other services.

I see SMS/MMS spam in spurts; I'll get one or two spam messages a day for a week or so, and then nothing for months. On Whatsapp, I get a few spam messages a month. I've never seen spam on GChat or FB Messenger. I don't use Viber or Telegram, so can't speak to those.

hummerbliss
0 replies
6d7h

(from India). We have huge SMS spam. Significant spam for me ismarketing SMS from companies. They automatically sign your number up for example when you make a purchase/at POS. No opt-out - its eternal

We do have facility for DND with Deparatment of Telecom but seems to come up short as mine is in DND but receive several messages and calls through out the day.

delfinom
0 replies
6d5h

On Android, I get dozens of spam political texts a day.

Luckily Google has added anti spam features to Google Messenger for years now and it filters out 99.999% of them. Once in a blue moon, a txt will slip by and i have to mark it as spam.

huevosabio
6 replies
6d13h

Completely uninformed question, doesn't this fight just push people to WhatsApp?

I never use SMS, and no one in Mexico does either. My friends in Europe seem to largely use WhatsApp as well. So it really seems like Americans are outliers in their choice for iMessage / SMS.

So, wouldn't this push Americans to WhatsApp?

rtpg
3 replies
6d12h

I think what happened is that Americans got unlimited SMS plans meaning they got used to just communicating by SMS. Europe got WhatsApp to deal with wild SMS pricing. So Europeans moved over to WhatsApp etc. Americans continued using SMS. Apple took advantage of this with iMessage silently upgrading stuff to their protocol. On top of this iPhone penetration in many places in the US is much higher I think.

simonklitj
2 replies
6d11h

Wild SMS pricing in Europe? Unlimited SMS has been the default in Denmark for at least 15 years.

vincentkriek
0 replies
6d10h

In the Netherlands WhatsApp became popular because they offered free SMS.

Longhanks
0 replies
6d9h

Well, Denmark is not the whole of Europe.

In Switzerland, free texts to non-Swiss numbers is expensive/rather uncommon. Instant Messaging is free to anyone the the world. Thus, SMS are dead (except for 2FA).

wpm
1 replies
6d13h

Most people who use iMessage here have literally no idea this is even happening and would not care if I told them. It's still just as hard as it's always been to get all of your friends/contacts to "just switch to WhatsApp".

noirbot
0 replies
6d12h

Also, pretty sure the overlap of "would ever want to use Whatsapp" and "cares about iMessage at all" is zero. Either you have Apple Status Symbol people, or you have "Meta can die in a fire entirely" or "idk, I just use SMS and some people have iMessage". The first and last groups aren't gonna switch, and the middle are probably only ever going to use Telegram or Signal.

api
6 replies
6d18h

A lot of people don’t understand the absolutely insane (and totally stupid) power of “blue text” in social settings, especially among teens. “Green text” is social suicide, largely because a lot of reactions and emojis and stuff don’t work. It’s also a status symbol… even though high end Android phones cost about what higher end iPhones cost and refurb iPhones are cheap.

The iMessage platform is probably the strongest lock in on iPhones. Break that and the phone market gets competitive again.

theshackleford
3 replies
6d14h

A lot of people don’t understand the absolutely insane (and totally stupid) power of “blue text” in social settings

In America. The rest of the world doesnt give a shit.

Break that and the phone market gets competitive again.

See above.

paxys
2 replies
6d12h

Most of America also doesn't give a shit. This whole blue/green bubble thing is a story only among nerds and some tech elitists.

tenacious_tuna
0 replies
6d12h

I was at a company holiday setting with some coworkers and one of them mentioned how the green/blue text thing genuinely factored into their dating decisions, on the basis that texting with someone without iMessage made the conversation clunkier and harder to build rapport.

So... I don't think this is just among nerds and tech elitists.

api
0 replies
6d5h

Oh summer child…

"Green text" will get you turned down for dates and ostracized from friend groups, especially in middle and high school but even (for dating) into adulthood in some cases.

Yes it's stupid, but people have turned far dumber things into status symbols like gigantic massively overpriced pedestrian-crusher trucks.

sroussey
0 replies
6d18h

So the biggest impediment to competition is the status of a blue text box in one messaging app?

If so, create your “status symbol” message app and you can go buy apple or google after, lol

burlesona
0 replies
6d16h

This is a weird take when iMessage isn’t even popular outside the US, and Android has 70% global market share. The market is very competitive.

lopkeny12ko
5 replies
6d17h

How is this not getting flagged by regulatory bodies as blatantly monopolistic behavior?

munchler
1 replies
6d11h

To be monopolistic, Apple would have to have a monopoly in messaging, which they surely don’t.

tristan957
0 replies
6d1h

Why do people continue to think that you have to have a monopoly to be monopolistic? Also, Apple does have a monopoly. They have a monopoly on all devices that can communicate through iMessage.

If that should be taken up by the DOJ or some other body is up to your interpretation of the law.

jabedude
1 replies
6d17h

Is Southwest Airlines not carrying luggage from United for free blatantly monopolistic behavior?

tristan957
0 replies
6d1h

I am struggling to see how this is comparable. Allowing iPhone users to talk to Android users through iMessage is a benefit to iPhone users. iPhone users get more end-to-end encrypted messages.

dijit
0 replies
6d17h

Same reason PS messenger can block third party clients.

Is it ethical? Not in my opinion. Facetime and iMessage were introduced under the guise of becoming open at some point, however that was because they lost a patent lawsuit iirc[0]

it's worth focusing on the differences between iMessage and Internet Explorer (which was the last monopoly battle that anyone cares about).

The truth of it is: across Apple devices, while iMessage is installed, the alternative message systems are just too successful to argue. The overwhelming majority are using facebook messenger or whatsapp anyway. So there's no evidence that Apple is curbing another industry.

Apple is also not in a monopolistic position except on their own hardware, which is true for everyone (including Blackberry with their messenger).

[0]: https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-20236114

jiggawatts
5 replies
6d20h

The fundamental issue is that there are no readily-available iPhone emulators that can send iMessages, and this is a good thing that people pay for.

The benefit of the Apple walled garden is that the spammers are kept out, because they can't get fifty SIM cards, plug them in to a "SIM box"[1], and start sending hundreds of thousands of scam messages via iMessage. This is easy in an uncontrolled, open-source ecosystem, but is prohibitively difficult in Apple's ecosystem where you need a physical device with a unique cryptographic ID that can be locked out by a central authority.

Yes, it's an "exclusive club" where members pay to keep the general public out. The general public doesn't like this, but that is what it is. Inherently, allowing "anyone" in would void the exclusivity and invite an unrelenting flood of spam.

At best, Apple could open up iMessage to other vendors that have similarly well-controlled devices with good hardware cryptographic attestation, but there aren't any.

[1] https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/sydney-man-charged-with-...

ewoodrich
2 replies
6d18h

Isn't there? You can use iMessage via the Messages app on a Mac and tools like BlueBubbles already have hooks to send and receive iMessages using the official client.

jiggawatts
1 replies
6d18h

Macs are an Apple product and have the very nearly the same hardware protections.

sudosysgen
0 replies
6d16h

How so? You can easily automate sending messages on a Mac, and you can easily change the IDs on Intel based Macs. Ultimately, the only solid line of defence is banning your phone number and Apple ID.

codexb
0 replies
6d13h

This argument doesn't make any sense from a user standpoint though. It would only make sense if users insisted on only using iMessage exclusively and didn't accept non-iMessage SMS messages at all. Getting an iphone and using iMessage doesn't make you less susceptible to spam text messages than Android users or people using other texting platforms, *because everyone uses SMS*. It's impossible not to.

SpaghettiCthulu
0 replies
6d16h

I must be doing something wrong because I've never received more than one SMS spam message per year.

MR4D
5 replies
6d18h

I don't understand how this is not theft of service, or at least unlawful access.

If I am reading the articles on Beeper correctly, they've applied a pretty brilliant hack to gain access to the iMessage network without an Apple ID.

That last part seems key (pardon the pun).

Can someone explain this to me? I feel like this technical issue is really in the weeds, so I'm sure there are multiple nuances I'm missing...

MR4D
2 replies
6d18h

Ok, people clearly aren't reading the first few words (nor the last line) of my post:

"I don't understand..."

"Can someone explain this to me? "

wrboyce
1 replies
6d16h

I think the problem is that you do understand and have explained it perfectly, but some people can’t handle the truth. These threads have brought out some ludicrous opinions (as anything Apple centric tends to on HN).

MR4D
0 replies
6d14h

Well, I actually don’t think I do.

For instance, wouldn’t this have to be reported as an unauthorized intrusion (getting access to a user’s messages without using their ID) ?

Also, nothing I’ve read has any criminal aspect to it (ignoring DMCA stuff).

Given all the issues with SMS security and spoofing, you’d think this would be an issue, but nobody has brought it up.

Seems unlikely that given all the coverage that I’d be the first and only person to notice that, which is why I don’t think I truly understand it.

GeekyBear
1 replies
6d17h

It certainly seems like it would have to be a violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.

If you recall, Aaron Swartz was hounded to death using that law after accessing JSTOR's servers without permission.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_v._Swartz

hnuser435
0 replies
5d21h

Never forget.

paxys
1 replies
6d12h

This ongoing saga reminds me of that famous story about how Microsoft engineers played a similar cat and mouse game to make MSN messenger interoperate with Yahoo's despite multiple efforts by the latter to block it.

rezonant
0 replies
6d12h

Someone linked to this recently, it's a great read.

https://www.nplusonemag.com/issue-19/essays/chat-wars/

kylehotchkiss
1 replies
6d19h

Amazing this same story keeps getting reposted every other day. Slow news week? Great time to announce something you've been working on HNers!

chrisoverzero
0 replies
6d19h

Amazing this same story keeps getting reposted every other day.

It keeps happening.

sprite
0 replies
6d5h

They could ask Google to remove it from Play Store also.

sircastor
0 replies
6d15h

It seems fairy obvious to me that the simple solution here is for Apple simply send a cease-and-desist to Beeper to stop using their network in an unauthorized manner (and I mean that in the literal sense of “you don’t have permission to do this”)

The only reason I can think of that Apple is willing to let this go on is to plug holes in their system shown by a relatively benign opponent.

pashky
0 replies
6d7h

I'm your typical Whatsapp on iPhone user from Europe who's here just for a good drama, but blimey if this guy's rhetoric isn't sooo repetitive and cringey now.

Like, my dude, it was an impressive technical hack, and you really pulled the tiger's whiskers when you went to prod with it, but dressing it in politics and greater mission and "freedom" with bald eagles and shit? Meh.

etchalon
0 replies
6d17h

It continues to be weird that anyone treats this as a technical battle when I'm sure Beeper will get a cease and desist at anytime.

ds
0 replies
6d5h

Technically speaking, Beeper can keep working for a long time. That is, Until apple starts checking if the client is on a official apple device. This may or may not be feasible for Apple to implement, mostly depending on if they even have the resources/method to know if every device is legitimate or not (they may not- especially for older devices)

If they do have a way to enforce 'authentic' devices, the only step after that for beeper to take will be to ask users to purchase the cheapest iphone that still works for imessage and to extract its serial/key/whatever to import into the android client.

bilsbie
0 replies
6d17h

Semi related. I got a smart watch with a phone number but I can’t text from it.

Can this product or a different product let me enter my number and let me participate in texting? Maybe a paid app?

(Could I build this with service otherwise?)

badrabbit
0 replies
6d16h

You know all the drm-y attestation b.s., yeah, don't be surprised when stuff like this accelerates apple and co.'s adaption of it. They can require the cpu to cryptographically verify imessage for it to talk to other clients. I hope the reverse engineers have a lot of fun though.

I don't oppose it but I do wonder why people can't just use a different client? Same with the usb-c nonsense, walled garden lawsuits,etc... when alternatives are viable, is it right to be intolerant of what you don't like? If I want to start a closed source proprietary crappy messaging app and I don't want other clients to talk to it, why would someone have a problem with that? But again, I think beeper's work is cool, I just have a hard time understanding the whole anti-apple sentiment. I mean, why support apple at all on your messaging app if you don't like them? Does apple or do apple users owe everyone else participation in their ecosystem?

I just can't reconcile the attitude with the attitude of liberty for all.

EricHolden12
0 replies
6d2h

You buy a first class ticket for an airline and you get access to the lounge in the airport with fast wifi and snacks.

Outside there are people with different tickets screaming to be let in because they know someone in there and it’s not fair that they can’t go in.

And Migicovsky is on the side trying to dig a little tunnel into the lounge.

iMessage is a perk of using an iPhone. You want to use iMessage? Get an iPhone.