T-Mobile, Verizon, and AT&T Have Reportedly Killed Their RCS Joint Venture (androidpolice.com) 55
According to a new report from Light Reading, the three major U.S. carriers (four at the time) have reportedly abandoned their joint venture to launch a new Cross Carrier Messaging Initiative (CCMI), that promised interoperability for an RCS Universal Profile-based messaging standard. It was originally set to be launched in 2020. [For a detailed explanation of RCS Messaging, we recommend this article.] Android Police reports: Although the company handling the logistics behind the cross-carrier effort claims that it's still "continuing to move forward with preparations," a Verizon spokesperson told Light Reading that "the owners of the Cross Carrier Messaging Initiative decided to end the joint venture effort." [...] This may seem like bad news, but things have changed since 2019. In the time since the CCMI was announced, Google leapfrogged the carrier's selfish dithering and rolled out its own RCS messaging solution via the Messages app, all connected to its Jibe network (though it will use your carrier network if it's Universal Profile-compatible). It's a move that means customers don't have to wait on their carriers to start the work they should have done five years ago. More recently, T-Mobile has essentially handed the reins for its whole network messaging solution to Google by adopting Messages as the default SMS app for all T-Mobile phones, connecting all its customers to Google's RCS network.
Given what has and hasn't succeeded when it comes to RCS messaging, what we'd like to see is for Verizon and AT&T to follow T-Mobile, give up on their own stupid standards, and simply adopt Google's RCS Messaging -- either by connecting their chat apps to Google's Jibe network somehow or by adopting the Messages app as sanctioned solutions, as T-Mobile did. But in the meantime, there's nothing to prevent customers on either network from just installing the Messages app themselves and bypassing the carrier mess altogether -- especially since it sounds like the carriers have given up on fixing it.
Given what has and hasn't succeeded when it comes to RCS messaging, what we'd like to see is for Verizon and AT&T to follow T-Mobile, give up on their own stupid standards, and simply adopt Google's RCS Messaging -- either by connecting their chat apps to Google's Jibe network somehow or by adopting the Messages app as sanctioned solutions, as T-Mobile did. But in the meantime, there's nothing to prevent customers on either network from just installing the Messages app themselves and bypassing the carrier mess altogether -- especially since it sounds like the carriers have given up on fixing it.
One more reason... (Score:3, Insightful)
...T-Mobile has essentially handed the reins for its whole network messaging solution to Google...
One more reason to turn off RCS entirely and to use good ole SMS. I'd rather use facebook messenger, and I despise facebook, than to hand Google all my chat data. The amount of personal information we are just willingly pouring through Google is astounding. Please, Google, knowing my every web site and all my browsing habits, that wasn't enough. Reading all my email wasn't enough either. Please also read all my most personal chats, everything. My whole life is yours. Don't worry, I trust every single employee who has access to it not to do anything with it for personal gain.
Do you really think every celebrity phone hack was someone hacking their phones from the outside in? Really???
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> than to hand Google all my chat data
How does that work with the Axolotyl Ratchet in Messages RCS?
Was T-Mobile on Snowden's PRISIM list? I know AT&T and Verizon were.
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How does that work with the Axolotyl Ratchet
It works just the way Google wants it to work, because, after all, they are the one's compiling the app. Don't worry, there's no key recovery possible anywhere in the process. Google said so. Or, actually they didn't, they didn't say anything on the subject at all, but hey, Google would never do that, right? Cuz they have absolutely nothing to gain by being able to read every message sent in the world. Really, it's ok. Trust them. Seriously, trust them.
Too late (Score:2)
You say Google could be lying and secretly exporting they key because "they are the ones compiling the app". I have bad news for you.
Google is the one compiling the *operating system*.
When you see your keystrokes on the screen, they show up on the screen because Google software reads the key presses and puts them on the screen. If you're using Google's operating system, you are *already* putting total trust in them. They can *already* read every key press. Anything that shows up on your screen, not only c
Re: One more reason... (Score:2)
Google has hopped on the E2EE bandwagon and that is positive. However, technical solutions do not limit options to the entity writing the software.
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but stopped in 2017
That's what I thought too, but recently I started getting ads for a product that I had never searched for online or visited any vendor's web site, just mentioned in an email. Considering how inaccurate Google Adsense normally is with my (admittedly diverse) browsing history it was quite surprising.
RCS is End To End encrypted (Score:3, Informative)
... so you are not going to "hand Google all my chat data".
The real problem has nothing to do with privacy, it has to do with Apple not playing ball.
As long as Apple has iMessage and controls 45%+ of the mobile market, we are never going to be able to truly move forward with decent messaging - everyone has to fall back to SMS all the time.
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The real problem is that this is all outdated US technology.
I'm pretty sure SMS still exists in The Netherlands, too.
Outside the US noone uses sms anymore
based on them not being available, or based on it being actively prevented?
in my country (The Netherlands) the providers have even dropped support for mms years ago.
MMS has its issues...but it's still the go-to way to make a group chat with multiple phones and do text-to-email.
Becauase each message costs ypou money
I haven't seen a cell phone plan that itemizes SMS charges in well over a decade, so I don't know where you're getting your "how things work in America" information from.
everyone has switched to WhatsApp, Telegram or Signal long ago.
1. All of those apps exist here, too.
2. With Whatsapp specifically, that's just giving info over
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I don't think that I know anyone who defaults to iMessage, ever. WhatsApp, Farcebook, SMS and Chime are pretty much all I've ever seen used in the last decade.
RCS is End To End encrypted - only sometimes (Score:2, Informative)
Unfortunately RCS end-to-end encryption doesn't work for groups of more than two or when two users have more than a single device apiece (i.e. not like having encrypted iMessage synchronized on your phone, tablet, and computer):
https://www.forbes.com/sites/z... [forbes.com]
Just like Telegram, Google’s RCS end-to-end encryption only works between two individuals, no groups, and only between one device per person. This is as basic as it gets, and it doesn’t get close to the level of security offered by Apple’s iMessage or Signal or WhatsApp.
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This is true for now. It is going to be added soon. E2E encryption for a group chat is a lot harder to get right and roll out.
The point is that E2E is the stated goal and the GPs idea that "all your messages belong to Google" is a false flag. iMessage being a closed proprietary system is the larger problem right now than the fact that group chats are not E2E encrypted.
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I keep my phone bill low by paying for only a minuscule amount of mobile data. I don't want anything to replace SMS.
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What Universe do you live in? Android (aka google) has 87% market share. Apple is like 13% or less.
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What does RCS do that MMS/SMS doesn't already do?
1) Work over IP. Send messages from a computer. Send messages over wifi. Also supports Voice and Video over IP
2) Send videos > 320x240px @ 100bps
3) Full resolution images and larger file attachments.
4) End to End Encryption. Not sent in plain text over the air.
5) Interactive\Rich formatting\image embeds. Instead of hyperlinks as plain text. (aka cards)
6) Verified senders for businesses. Get a text from Google [Verified] not a random text number.
7) Named Groups, ability to add members and for members
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You can choose any email provider and yet you choose Gmail. And then you complain that Google has too much of your personal messaging information?
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You can choose any email provider and yet you choose Gmail. And then you complain that Google has too much of your personal messaging information?
I was either unclear, or formal persuasion, dialectics, rhetorical devices, and satire were missing from your education. Probably a little of column A and a little from column B.
When I said...
Google, knowing my every web site and all my browsing habits, that wasn't enough. Reading all my email wasn't enough either. Please also read all my most personal chats, everything. My whole life is yours. Don't worry, I trust every single employee who has access to it not to do anything with it for personal gain.
...it was intended to be satire. I was using myself as a stand in for the general "John Doe" member of the public who uses their services. It wasn't meant to indicate myself literally.
I haven't personally used gmail since I put up my own virtual multi-domain email server in 2015. I also switched over to Duckduckgo
Is Jibe open? (Score:1)
Given that we just had [slashdot.org] an article about why closed platforms suck, is Jibe open? Or does it chain people to Google's messaging app?
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Jibe chains people to Google's Jibe servers, which are just RCS gateways. RCS is open, Jibe is proprietary (or at least their page says zero about being open) and will probably be cancelled within a couple of years :p
Re: Is Jibe open? (Score:1)
That's what I thought, but couldn't confirm from a glance at search results.
So basically it's Google Talk, er Google Chat, no wait Google Hangouts, no wait, Google Hangouts Again, er we mean,
Another monopoly play by Google (Score:1)
While US cell carriers are filthy lazy incompetent scum, I have serious concerns about Google moving into the telecommunications space. Their de facto monopolies on search, ads, and web browsers are bad enough, and I really don't believe that allowing them to obtain another monopoly, especially on something as fundamental and crucial as text messaging, is in anyone's best interests.
But then, the US's capitalism fetish has allowed vast portions of its economy that should have remained public (e.g. healthcare
Re:Another monopoly play by Google (Score:5, Insightful)
And would you even want the Federal government telling cell companies what messaging system to use? Is there any reason to think that would turn out better than the industry working it out for themselves, especially considering that they know what they're doing far better than some bureaucrat or member of congress? Do you think they'd enforce a solution that didn't include letting them read your texts at will?
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Healthcare used to be required to be nonprofit, then they repealed that law in the 1970s and everything went fully for-profit, and many people argue that the quality to cost ratio decreased. (this is a hard thing to really quantify since technology is advancing so fast at the same time) Anyway, maybe thats what OP was thinking of.
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The real problem with the cost originated with medicare and the feds. They wouldn't pay health care providers the full rate they were charging. If a health care provider provides a service that costs $1000 for materials, salaries, taxes, etc...
But, medicare came along and said $1000 is too much. We're only going to pay $700. And, even worse in rural settings they would only pay $500. So
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Seriously? You think Medicare caused the price gouging in the medical industry? Good grief.
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insurance forced a discount of greater than 80%.
This is because of the insurance cartels insist on getting huge discounts in order to service those facilities. If the clinic knows that they're going to have to give a 75% discount then they're going to quadruple their prices just to break even.
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I would love to know how they're going about locating an individual's debt and purchasing it. I'm in touch with a few groups/ministries that would be very interested in
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Since personal information is protected by HIPPA they cannot find one persons debt to erase. But, they can sift the data for certain patterns and select a large chunk of people to buy up the debt for and then erase it.
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Healthcare used to be required to be nonprofit, then they repealed that law in the 1970s and everything went fully for-profit
Fascinating. What country do you live in?
In the US, about 1 in 5 hospitals are for-profit, [aha.org] and for-profit hospitals existed for decades prior to the 1970s. [politifact.com]
Oh wait... maybe you're just trolling?
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Hm, thanks for the fact-check. I think snopes gives a better explanation though
The only sliver of truth here is the fact that the increase in popularity of HMOs that occurred after passage of the act (and its amendments) greatly expanded for-profit health care in America.
So the cause/effect seemed obvious to a lot of people, though the specifics are being described very incorrectly.
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But then, the US's capitalism fetish has allowed vast portions of its economy that should have remained public (e.g. healthcare)
2017-2021 gave me some second thoughts when it comes to giving the federal government a more direct role in healthcare.
I'm all for federal government's role as a healthcare market overseer and regulator, because the worst that can happen when a reality TV crazybrain gets elected to leadership is having that oversight and those regulations disappearing - which, I want to reiterate, is still bad. But if the federal government becomes the only health insurance provider, I'd be really, really worried about Craz
All your base are belong to us (Score:5, Insightful)
>"what we'd like to see is for Verizon and AT&T to follow T-Mobile, give up on their own stupid standards, and simply adopt Google's RCS Messaging -- either by connecting their chat apps to Google's Jibe network somehow or by adopting the Messages app"
Just like your browser (Chrom*). Just like your Email (most ISP's gave up Email service and forced customers to use Gmail). Etc. Just give up and use Google. Hmm. What could go wrong having one company with access to everything you do/go/say and with control over all the "standards"?
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I'm just missing why *anything* that defaults to "use google servers" isn't immediately dismissed as a Bad Idea(tm)
Encryption? (Score:3)
I am using RCS for years in Canada, it basically uses data and you can see when messages are delivered/read, react on them, etc, a little bit like Facebook Messenger. Also it can fallback to true SMS if there is no data/wifi. It is transparent and all between all cells/carriers in my entourage.
I think the only things missing is E2E encryption :-(
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RCS does have E2E encryption. It has since 2020.
https://www.theverge.com/2020/... [theverge.com]
Re:Encryption? (Score:5, Informative)
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I am using RCS for years in Canada, it basically uses data and you can see when messages are delivered/read, react on them, etc, a little bit like Facebook Messenger. Also it can fallback to true SMS if there is no data/wifi. It is transparent and all between all cells/carriers in my entourage.
I think the only things missing is E2E encryption :-(
RCS is doomed by design. It has way too many flaws:
1. Requires a phone number which is owned by a carrier
2. Doesn't work well on computers/tablet without a phone number and cellular connectivity.
3. Carriers still have the possibility to bill per message
4. No centralized/searchable message archive. I rather have this than E2E encryption.
5. Does it even works well when you have multiple devices?
Did Google write this? (Score:2)
You know you're old when ... (Score:3)
RCS means "reaction control system"...
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Technology in the modern age (Score:2)
Email would not have been invented in this day and age.
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In a way, we've sort of gone back to the early-mid 90s, where you had America Online or Compuserv or Prodigy or Genie, and if your best friend posted on the Compuserv boards you'd have no way of reading them from a Real Nerd ISP.
For the better anyway (Score:2)
T-Mobile, Verizon, and AT&T Have Reportedly Killed Their RCS Joint Venture
Not sad, CVS is much better.
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I'm waiting for SVN Messaging.
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> I'm waiting for SVN Messaging.
Let's hope Linus doesn't see this message. He'd tell you (in great length) that git messaging is the only sensible choice.
Meh (Score:2)