After Apple killing off the Lightning connector on the iPhone (if only they would remember to do likewise with their input devices), the story I’ve most looked forward to writing about that company would involve it raising the lowest common denominator for Android-to-iPhone text messaging from its current miserable and unencrypted state.
So of course that news broke, in the form of an Apple statement to 9to5Mac announcing plans to add RCS support to its Messages app, at 6 p.m. Lisbon time on the last day of Web Summit–when I was racing to finish up a couple of stories so I could then get going to dinner. I didn’t even see this happen until hours later, after one of PCMag’s staffers had already done the honors.
I can still applaud this impending development, though. Apple’s refusal to support even the industry-standard version of RCS (short for Rich Communications Service), without Google’s extensions to it, left every text and multimedia message from an Android phone to an iPhone or vice versa sent in the clear, devoid of encryption to stop eavesdropping attempts.
That should be an abhorrent state for the company that keeps calling privacy “a fundamental human right,” but Apple CEO Tim Cook instead treated questions about this glaring privacy gap as an opportunity to sell new iPhones.
On background, Apple PR’s most common objection was that the non-Google version of RCS only supports encryption in transit instead of the end-to-end encryption provided by Apple’s iMessage and Google’s version of RCS. Which would stand up much better if Apple didn’t ship mail clients for all of its devices that themselves only support encryption in transit.
Apple also regularly pointed to the availability of phone-number-based messaging options that delivered end-to-end encryption. Which would be more appealing if the leading such alternative, by an immense margin, were not the Meta-owned WhatsApp. Tell me again how privacy is a fundamental human right?
Apple’s decision to support the “Universal Profile” version of RCS sanctioned by the telecom trade group GSMA means that Android-iPhone texting won’t get “e2e” encryption but will finally gain encryption in transit. And those chats between people on different mobile platforms will also get such upgrades as typing indicators, read receipts and higher-resolution images and videos.
Texts from Android users to iPhone users will show up in green, not the blue bubbles of other iPhone users routed through Apple’s iMessage servers. That falls well into the “like I care” level of tech-interoperability problems for me.
This welcome if overdue development leaves a new villain in the RCS-support space: Google, which after years of begging Apple to “get the message” about RCS has somehow failed to convince Google to support RCS in its own Google Voice service. I look forward to seeing this company stop defending the indefensible–and I just hope that news doesn’t break on the last night of a conference that has me five or six time zones to the right of my home.
https://robpegoraro.com/2023/11/18/the-apple-story-i-wish-id-had-time-to-write-this-week-the-company-caves-on-rcs/
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