This is interesting because it’s a hardware device.
It’s really common for apps to claim they have “end to end encryption” when it’s obviously a lie, because consumer hardware isn’t fully controlled by the user’s chosen software. It’s different when you lie about it on actual hardware, where it’s more understandable for users to believe the claim.
This is interesting because it’s a hardware device.
It’s really common for apps to claim they have “end to end encryption” when it’s obviously a lie, because consumer hardware isn’t fully controlled by the user’s chosen software. It’s different when you lie about it on actual hardware, where it’s more understandable for users to believe the claim.