I'm indifferent, since I've got both installed, there's no escaping having to use WhatsApp in many countries around the globe. If I want to keep in touch with family/friends then only one or two contacts use signal, for everyone else it's WhatsApp or the alternative is SMS.
I'm also indifferent though because of I want the interoperability, Beeper is doing fine.
It's certainly different, but for signal users who want to maintain that level of privacy, it's probably something they want, right? From their perspective this is probably a good decision.
I'm indifferent because I'd personally rather have interoperability and Beeper gets the job done.
Yeahhh it's amazing, your choices are a closed platform that forces you to buy their expensive devices, or SMS, or another proprietary platform ran by a notorious privacy predator.
Sms has been god awful since the beginning, both the standard and the business implementation. Remember bullshit pricing models for texts? 10center per text over your limit. Even today, the standard hasn't kept up with modern times.
That's the only reason I started using Telegram. It might not be secure or whatever, but it sure is nice to have voice and video calling on a nice-looking desktop app. It's the only one I was able to get my family to use, and that I already had some friends using.
But I could never get them to use advanced shit like SimpleX or something similar lol. "But this already works?" Yeeeaaah but... Nah, it'll never fly. 😑
Not only easy to understand but for a while it was the only way to do 2fa that was usable by lots of people. Smartphones aren't as ubiquitous as people think, even today.
SMS's fall from grace wasn't actually that it could be intercepted, it was the fact it started being used as an excuse to ask for a phone number and use that to track people.
Google still won't allow you to use any form of 2fa if you don't give them a phone number. Twitch/Amazon too. Facebook used to (until they got Whatsapp, now they don't need to ask.) LinkedIn used to (until they got broken into so many times it became a humongous liability).