At the end of the day, you have to trust someone, whether it's a tech vendor, a software project lead, or even the person you're conversing with. What's important is that you get to continue to consciously exercise that choice.
I choose to use signal, and have no interest in this random crypto nonsense thingie, so I'll choose to not use that bit.
> I was phrasing that unclear, I meant that you have to trust Intel if you use Mobilecoin.
Ah, fair. I think you could also argue that you have to trust Intel if you use Signal anyway.
> Why wouldn't you be able to exercise that choice?
I'm not saying you can't (unlike some), but I think it's worth underlining the point that "trusting nobody" is rarely, if ever an option. So in a world where you end up having to trust someone, being able to continuously exercise that is important.
> [0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26715348
No you don't - no-one's forcing you to use it.
At the end of the day, you have to trust someone, whether it's a tech vendor, a software project lead, or even the person you're conversing with. What's important is that you get to continue to consciously exercise that choice.
I choose to use signal, and have no interest in this random crypto nonsense thingie, so I'll choose to not use that bit.