Saying "this is a better SMS app" got people on-board and let them "upgrade" to secure messaging. That's why I started using it in the "TextSecure" days.
But, sadly, I agree with Signal's reasoning here. Mixing the two protocols was annoyingly complex. If someone stopped using Signal, messages you sent to them would never arrive - with no notification. And there's no obvious way to "downgrade" to SMS.
I was working on RCS a decade ago. I'm glad to see it is finally getting somewhere - but I'm sad it is at the expense of better and more secure protocols.
But there are threads in their issue tracker where Signal people would disagree with basically functionality of responding to text messages on dual sim devices. "We'll always use the Signal registered number as default".
One part of this is a terrible(but working) protocol, the other is really weird product management where basic needs of the consumer are brushed aside with a "I know best approach" that doesn't really work when you're not in the shoes of apple and have the ability to just replace SMS altogether.
I can imagine that's less of an issue in the US; do you pay extra for text messages and calls that go across state lines?
Took a lot of grumpy users before they backtracked.
I use and like Signal. I'm not smart enough to disagree with some of their technical decisions, but I wish they could have found a way to make SMS/RCS work.
Almost all phone plans have unlimited (domestic) texting and calling and differentiate themselves with data, reliability and ”free” perks like subsidized Netflix. You really have to go out of your way to find a plan with limited texts/calls.
By definition, Signal is not going to have bells and whistles and niche features, to keep the codebase lean and easier to avoid security weaknesses.
If you want an app with many features, use Telegram.
(They did however ship emoji reactions in Signal because most people actually like it and the other apps do have it; curiously missing in Telegram).
I don't understand why people on this board keep forgetting that central Europe and the US is the minority of the world population.
Everyone keeps bringing up WhatsApp. But it seems that everyone has all but forgotten that WhatsApp became so popular not because they only focused on the US market, but because they went around the globe and specifically targeted feature phones as well. I.e. they understood that their own home turf isn't enough to make a dominant chat application.
In the UK, where I am, most contracts have unlimited SMS. I think even the cheapest PAYG plans include massive bundles.
Lots of companies send out reminders by SMS because it is universally accepted. Not every customer has WhatsApp.
You can see various threads where people complained about the forced Apple emoji e.g. https://github.com/signalapp/Signal-Android/issues/3712 and https://github.com/signalapp/Signal-Android/issues/3675
Signal's own FAQ says
> Signal Android includes built-in emoji functionality for consistency between platforms
https://support.signal.org/hc/en-us/articles/360017561992-Wh...
The developers were adamant that they know better than me what I want from my SMS tool. And then proceeded to work on crypto and stories.
"It doesn't matter for the use cases I don't care about" - what a selfish look at the world.
Besides paying for parking by SMS and other services in Europe there's also M-Pesa and similar services[1]
It happens in iMessage and RCS threads as well.
I don't think the reasoning for their implementation is as well thought out as you claim here.
Telegram has had emoji reactions since 2021 -- https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/magazines/panache/now-y...
Fine by me. If they want a better experience, I have almost every messaging app on the Dutch market bridged to my Matrix server so I don't care, they'll just have to live with the lack of features if they want to chat with me (or install something like Signal).
I don't care about RCS and other ISP standards that exist to squeeze more money out of texting. I'll use Telegram/Signal/WhatsApp calling before I'll use my phone app because my subscription doesn't include free minutes (and I barely call anyway) so I've gotten the benefits of tech like WiFi calling through VoLTE for years before ISPs bothered sending their VoLTE profiles to my phone.
Read before replying. I literally said "for person-to-person communication".
> The death of SMS is hardly specific to central Europe and the US.
I hate to be a grammar Nazi, but since you're specifically attacking my wording I have to correct you. This statement would only be correct if it was: "The death of SMS for person-to-person communication is hardly specific to central Europe and the US."
So yes, your statement is incorrect. It's not dead, far from. It might get there eventually, but definitely not yet.
Did you mean to reply to a different comment? Mine was a reply to the GP, to answer the very narrow questions he asked about the US.