Researchers from several institutes worldwide recently developed Quarks, a new, decentralized messaging network based on blockchain technology. Their proposed system could overcome the limitations of most commonly used messaging platforms, allowing users to retain control over their personal data and other information they share online.

  • FlowVoid@midwest.social
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    1 year ago

    The blockchain Is not public. It can only be accessed by nodes whose members are in the channel.

    I’m curious whether without a blockchain there is a solution that (a) allows users to access all their encrypted messages even if any individual server goes down, (b) preserves a record of all communications/edits, and © is resistant to record tampering by a malicious server admin.

    • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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      1 year ago

      The blockchain Is not public. It can only be accessed by nodes whose members are in the channel.

      So, federation across channel participants, but with blockchain instead of a “shared database”?

      • FlowVoid@midwest.social
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        1 year ago

        Yes, that sounds like their goal.

        Blockchain is used to prevent a malicious participant from altering/corrupting records.

    • regalia@literature.cafe
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      1 year ago

      Yeah it’s called storing things client side lol.

      Also the whole point of encryption is that it can’t be tampered with by a middle man. We’ve accomplished all of that already.

      • FlowVoid@midwest.social
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        1 year ago

        Storing client side isn’t good enough, your records could be lost or destroyed. That’s why people use Gmail.

        And it’s not just third parties, what about untrusted recipients? For example, how do you prove you sent someone a message on a decentralized system?

        • regalia@literature.cafe
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          1 year ago

          you can store things encrypted

          also do you know what identity keys are? We’ve solved that decades ago with pgp keys lol

          • FlowVoid@midwest.social
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            1 year ago

            Even if it’s encrypted, it can be lost or destroyed if it’s stored client side.

            I know what identity keys are, but they don’t solve the problem. If someone says they didn’t receive your message, the best way to prove you successfully sent it is to use a distributed ledger.

            • regalia@literature.cafe
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              1 year ago

              Yes there is??? Do you know what a read receipt is?

              Again, storing messages on the blockchain is a fucking terrible idea. I don’t need to store the dumb memes my friends send to each other eternally on the blockchain, nor does anyone give a shit. If it’s important enough to want to be saved, you do this new technique called a damn backup.

              I don’t want to open myself up to my key getting hacked and my entire life history’s messages getting leaked. I don’t want to open myself to someone stealing my device where my key is stored and having indefinite access to all my past, present, and future data. I don’t want to leave my data publicly available with all the metadata and message sizes to see for any unknown third parry, and to who is being sent what to whom. I don’t want to be vulnerable to potential encryption breaking techniques in the future. I don’t want to deal with the gas cost, the huge amount of latency that would make real time chat unviable, and the insane amount of overhead to solve an already solved problem with an objectively worse solution in every possible way.

              These are problems that don’t need to be solved with blockchain. Every problem you’re suggesting has been solved decades ago and for absolutely free. You are dense as hell and aren’t even attempting to look at the already existing technology that has already solved this. Fuck out of here crypto bro.

              • FlowVoid@midwest.social
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                1 year ago

                Do you know what a read receipt is?

                That doesn’t solve the problem. If you don’t get a read receipt, then you can’t prove you sent the message. And if the recipient doesn’t want you to be able to prove you sent a message, they can disable sending read receipts.

                This sort of system is not meant for your use case. It is not meant for memes or other things nobody cares about. It is meant for people who need an auditable permanent copy of their communication.

                For example, businesses sending orders, contracts, etc to each other. Or lawyers sending documents to each other. They need systems that are private, not susceptible to central server failure, yet nevertheless auditable in case of an untrustworthy recipient.

                If a lawyer sends a time-sensitive letter to opposing counsel, the recipient must not be able to claim, “You did not send it to me on time”. Blockchain is a good solution for such needs.

                I don’t want to leave my data publicly available with all the metadata

                Did you read the paper? This isn’t Bitcoin. The metadata is not available to the public.

                • regalia@literature.cafe
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                  1 year ago

                  This is such an obscure situation that doesn’t even need to be solved with blockchain. Look at the article being posted. “Messaging network for safer communications”, which now apparently turns to just a single situation where a lawyer needs to send a time sensitive email and needs to prove it was sent? Which again, doesn’t actually even solve the problem. In this case, your blockchain ponzi scheme email can easily get caught by a spam filter. You’ve now turned the use case to some global read receipt system, which is dumb as hell and something nobody needs.

                  This use case literally does not exist. It can also be solved by a simple email server. A business that wants to keep logs of all their messages being sent out or received can store everything on their server with inbound or outbound emails. If in the super extreme scenario where a lawyer sends an email and the counsel ignores it, they can get in a lot of legal trouble for lying and would just get delayed. They lawyer can also prove they sent an outbound copy on their email server. What do you think needs to be “auditable” in communication? A business sending a damn receipt does not need this solution, that’s the end user for their email being valid. A lawyer sending private documents to each other want the literal last thing to be on a fucking public cloud server that is invisibly accessible by any fucking third party. Do you hear yourself? Are you a real person??

                  Literally none of these obscure scenarios you’re trying to come up with even need a blockchain solution. You should recognize how hard you’re trying to justify this as it being a dumb fuck solution. Despite all these issues you’re apparently inventing, we use our existing technology every day and none of these are issues. You’re coming off more like ChatGPT then a normal person.

                  • FlowVoid@midwest.social
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                    1 year ago

                    I just gave you one example of a use case. It’s hardly unique. There are plenty of time-sensitive messages sent in business settings, and plenty of people who don’t necessarily want to acknowledge receiving them.

                    More examples, off the top of my head:

                    • Manager tells worker they need to cover an emergency on the weekend, worker claims they never received the message.

                    • Business wants to cancel a work order, contractor shows up and says they weren’t properly notified of the cancellation.

                    • Supervisor sends disciplinary note to employee before dismissal, employee says it was never sent and then claims wrongful termination.

                    And of course, this has nothing to do with email. So if you set up a “spam filter” that deletes your boss’s messages, that’s on you. They know they sent you the message, even if you delete it or otherwise pretend they didn’t.

                    This is about an independent audit trail, not “keeping logs”. Your personal email server doesn’t count, because you can alter the log to show whatever you want. Nobody is going to take your word for it.

                    Finally, it’s pretty clear you have no idea how this system is supposed to work, because you keep claiming that documents are “accessible by any third party”. You do understand that not every blockchain system is public, right?