Telegram starts to look like a super app, echoing WeChat

Einar@lemm.ee to Technology@lemmy.world – 188 points –
Telegram starts to look like a super app, echoing WeChat | TechCrunch
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The worst part is, they're partnering with Tencent.

Telegram is dead.

This week, TON Foundation announced that it’s forged a partnership with Tencent Cloud, which has “already successfully supported TON validators and plans to expand its services further to help meet TON’s high compute intensity and network bandwidth needs.” Validators, in web3 lingo, are participants that help authenticate transactions in a blockchain network.

It looks like the partnership with Tencent only extends to their Web3 blockchain thing, and there doesn't seem to be any partnership in the main app so it's not the end of the world - at least, for now.

Also, what even is this TON blockchain? I never knew Telegram had anything to do with crypto :/

Yeah, nah. Anything the CCP can slip it’s slimy festering little dick into, it will.

There’s no way in hell that Telegram is secure.

I guess, but I don't see how much they can really influence Telegram without any stake in the app itself. They only seem to have a deal for cloud-hosting with the TON Foundation, a non-critical part of the app, and even that appears to be non-exclusive. So if Tencent tries to force a bad decision onto Telegram, what's stopping them from severing ties and moving everything over to another provider?

Of course, we don't know what the situation will be like in the future, but at this present moment, I don't think Telegram's security has been breached by this. (Also I think you triple-posted this comment)

Apologies for triple post. Lemmy seems a bit unresponsive so sometimes I hit ‘post’ a couple of times without realising that it actually registered.

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Telegram is partnering with tencent??

They are renting server space off a big company, not much different than AWS or Azure.

Except that it is

You are just used to aws. They are a shit company too.

Tencent is a CCP front. No way they are just letting Telegram operate on their hardware without snooping some. No guarantees about data security when you're operating on someone else's switches.

Yeah, sure. Totally different from having backdoors to the NSA or collecting massive amounts of personal data for targeted ads.

EDIT: You can't trust ANY company if your concern is privacy; your data is just too profitable (for them) to sit there untouched.

Amazon and Google are NSA fronts. You are just used to what you know. Our computers have chips in them made by Intel, with closed firmware. Our operating systems are made by Microsoft, Google and Apple.

I agree that it's better to be under American spies than Chinese spies but it's mostly the same idea of monitoring everyone and making sure they stay in line.

The entire point of E2EE is that it doesn't matter who the host is.

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Telegram is a suprisingly good app.

  • Open source clients
  • Decent Linux client on the laptop (whatsapp desktop is just terrible)
  • It can be downloaded without Google's appstore.

I wish other apps were half as good as Telegram.

  • More importantly, non-electron app.

It bothers me that the major complaint is not the privacy issues or the people who own it behind the scenes...

but the technology used to build the desktop application. Electron is just a tool.

  • Owned by the Russians

  • Partnered with the CCP Tencent

Hasn't the founder been a vocal critic of Russia for years, including the Ukraine war? I don't really see why that would be a concern, especially since Telegram is supposedly owned by a US LLC

Russia has an army of "vocal critics" who play an important role in the pantomime, you see them on RT regularly. It doesn't prove anything.

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a yes, the ceo that isn't on russia and is viewd as a criminal for being against the war?

"the russians" is the new "the jews" but for liberals, right?

Nah more “the Nazis” vibes to it really.

Russians didn't invade Iraq, Americans did.

America has invaded a lot of places and I’d not recommend people use services from there either if you value privacy.

Especially if you are Muslim. I remember a data being sent from a French-origin Muslim-targetted international app to the US army!!!

Whataboutism detected.

Whataboutism is the logical and correct response to hypocrites.

Actually, it's a logical fallacy.

hah, this is ridiculous.

I will continue to point out hypocrisy. You do your thing.

Indeed, using fallacies is ridiculous.

I'm glad people call you out for it.

It would only be hypocrisy if it was the US that was calling Russians Nazi's. But instead you used some decades old war, instead of the one going on right now.

The Iraq War is still ongoing, it flares up and flares down from time to time.

And the murderous American thugs who raped the Middle East are still around.

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yeah it is too good for just to be called a messaging app, hope it will be more privacy focused

Well, thats also easy since telegram clients dont do much more than displaying messages stored on a server. Its more a viewer than a full client.

And that compromises hard on privacy and security, which Signal and Whatsapp dont do, they have proper Clients that have to really handle and store incoming messages. And the E2EE makes it harder, developing an independent desktop client, like Signal always had and Whatsapp recently got. But both are mediocre at best, sure.

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The shitty forced "stories" did me question seriously this once wonderful app. If I'd want to look at crappy TikTok-like shorts from other people, I'd be on TikTok.

I had the same worry when it happened to signal

Once I saw the stories I was like ok wtf. How do I turn this off?

Maybe revanced manager can do it.

I'm using Nekogram, that at least allows to automatically hide (archive) them.

Forkgram

https://www.f-droid.org/en/packages/org.forkgram.messenger/

Seems to be doing the trick for me but the icon sucks and I had to rename it in the android UI cause it uses its package name for its display name lol. How's nekogram compare?

Yeah, the package/display name issue has been a bug for a while in Forkgram. Nekogram just works for me, nothing special apart from some custom options, such as hide stories.

Telegram has open source their client code. Not their server code. It's even on f Droid.

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I was under impression that Google Play and Apple App Store don't allow apps that can do practically everything (super apps). Is it really allowed? If a completely new company submit a chat app that somehow includes taxy hailing, food delivery, nfc/qr wallet and micro-loan features all at once instead of adding those features gradually in future updates, would Apple and Google accept the app?

WeChat and other composite apps are already on the stores, so I don’t see why others also wouldn’t be allowed.

But outside China, WeChat is only a messaging app, right? The super app aspect is only available for China domestic users with a WeChat version distributed outside Play Store? Other notable super apps (Tata Neu, Grab, Gojek, etc) are also seemingly only operates in Asia. Or is there any US/EU-based super apps out there? Is the lack of western super apps caused by regulation, app store rules, or something else entirely?

I’ve seen wechat pay and other features used throughout Asia, though to a much lesser degree than localized services. That is to say, it’s still a “super-app” in all markets. Which services are supported in each market is up to the real-world marketplace, not necessarily the Google Play or App Store. As far as I know, the international version of wechat still has most of the same capabilities (and privacy concerns thereof) that the domestic China Weixin app has.

It’s a good question why western super apps haven’t taken off yet, and I feel like most users prefer fractured services until now. For example, Facebook had marketplace and messenger as part of its main service for years. Then, it decided to fracture them off into separate apps/services.

Everyone complaining about both telegram and signal here should, idk, just start dead dropping handwritten notes to people inside of dead rats, like the true privacy experts.

Privacy is important, yes. But if all of my friends use telegram, I'm going to use it too. Not only that, I'm going to be happy about it, because the telegram app is 1000x better than pretty much any other messaging app.

braces for angry downvotes

You don't understand, when it's only you in that platform, it's the ultimate privacy.

It does have a ton of functions tbh. I use it to access bots and keep notes. Even repositories for apps - Revanced Extended uses it for e.g. !

This is the best summary I could come up with:


Telegram, the popular messenger with 800 million monthly active users worldwide, is inching closer to adopting an ecosystem strategy that is reminiscent of WeChat’s super app approach.

To build out this super app platform, Telegram relies on a network of infrastructure partners both from the established tech world and the crypto space.

WeChat has pioneered the mini app model in China and now powers millions of them serving functions from payments, food delivery, e-commerce, ride-hailing, to driver’s license renewal, just to name a few.

The developers would also need to learn the programming languages of blockchain apps, which might actually be an easier barrier to overcome than the process of understanding the economic incentives that facilitate decentralized applications.

Importantly, payment functionality played a critical role in WeChat’s early rise as it instilled a habit among users to make daily transactions through the chat app.

It will be fascinating to witness what lessons Telegram and TON take from WeChat and how a mini app platform with a decentralized twist unfolds.


The original article contains 678 words, the summary contains 169 words. Saved 75%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!

Uninstalled and moved to signal. But no one I know is on signal 🤡

Telegram is rarely used in my country anyway.