UPDATE: Dec. 10, 2023, 2:29 p.m. EST Beeper Mini discovered a way to allow Android users to send their texts as iMessage-based, blue bubbles to iPhone users, but according to The Verge, Apple isn't having it. The Cupertino-based tech giant blocked "techniques that exploit fake credentials in order to gain access to iMessage," according to Apple's senior PR rep Nadine Haija.This, according to Haija, is meant to protect Apple users' security and privacy.
"It's not easy being green," Kermit the Frog once said — and that couldn't be more true if you're an Android user in a pro-iPhone environment. iDevice users don't want to date you, friends berate you for crippling group texts, and people assume that you're poor.
As a tech reviewer who owns both iPhone and Android phones, I don't give a rat's behind about my friends' protests when I text 'em with my Pixel 8 Pro and Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra. They will deal. However, if you are tired of iPhone users bullying you, there is a solution: the Beeper Mini app.
No, efforts to bring iMessage to Android aren't new, but the Beeper Mini's method of doing so is.
Other apps "iPhonize" Android phones by transmitting texts through a Mac hosted in the cloud, according to The Verge. However, this is a security nightmare. Sunbird and Nothing Chats had to sunset their iMessage-to-Android services due to severe insecurities. Beeper Mini, on the other hand, does things differently.
The developers devised a way to associate a phone number with iMessage, dispatch messages directly to Apple's servers, and receive messages back on the phone within the app seamlessly.
“We jailbroke iPhones then dove deep into the OS to see how everything worked,” Eric Migicovsky, Beeper's CEO, told The Verge.“Then wrote new code from scratch to reproduce everything inside our Android app.”
Migicovsky claims that Beeper Mini is secure. It can't see contacts nor messages. According to Ars Technica, you don't even need an Apple ID to set it up.
As a cherry on top, iPhone users will be none the wiser that you're an Android owner in disguise.
Beeper Mini's success was short-lived. Less than a week after its launch, there were reports on Reddit that users were being plagued with technical issues. Unfortunately for the Beeper Mini team (and fortunately for the Apple team), its efforts to bring iMessage to Android users have been blocked, according to a statement Apple issued to The Verge.
"We took steps to protect our users by blocking techniques that exploit fake credentials in order to gain access to iMessage. These techniques posed significant risks to user security and privacy, including the potential for metadata exposure and enabling unwanted messages, spam, and phishing attacks," Nadine Haija, Apple's senior PR manager, said.
In response to Apple's blockage efforts, Beeper Mini posted the following tweet on its official X page:
"Work continues to fix the issue causing the Beeper Mini outage. We know how hard this has been for those who loved using Beeper Mini, and we're extremely sorry for the inconvenience. We are feeling good, though, and hope to have good news to share soon."
Beeper Mini once set users back $1.99 per month on the Google Play Store, but as of this writing, it has been pulled down from the Android app store.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
[Update] This app sends Android texts as blue 'iMessage' bubbles-寸地尺天网
sitemap
文章
43
浏览
4
获赞
7133
Tim Cook calls out 'senseless killing' of George Floyd in WWDC opening remarks
Tim Cook took the stage this morning at Apple's Steve Jobs Theater in Cupertino, California to talkMultitasking Benchmark: PC Gaming + YouTube + Discord
In today's article we're going to look at multitasking performance when gaming. This is a complex suWhat Happened Last Time AMD Beat Intel?
Seeing how quickly AMD Ryzen processors are flying off the shelves, it's not hard to see the desktopFacebook, Twitter, and Google CEOs set for Oct. 28 Senate hearing
It looks like Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg will be headed back to Capitol Hill for anothInstagram's 'Hashtag Mindfulness' boom: The good, the bad, and the ugly
March Mindfulness is our new series that examines the explosive growth in mindfulness and meditationYouTube videos won't play right now, and maybe that's for the best
What in the world are Flat Earthers going to do?Everyone's second-favorite radicalization engine camThose sonic attacks on U.S. officials in 2017 might've been microwaves
Remember the mysterious illness caused by suspected "sonic" attacks back in 2017 that afflicted someApple car will launch later than we thought, report claims
If there's ever a reward for the most mythical gadget, the Apple car should win it. The fabled electThe summoning circle meme calls upon your deepest, darkest desires
If you could request anyone and anything, what would it be?The new "summoning circle" meme has TwittTwitter just made securing your account way more convenient
Let's be real: Some forms of online security are a pain in the ass. That doesn't, however, mean theyTwitter finally removes Trump video it labeled as a 'risk of violence'
UPDATE: Jan. 6, 2021, 6:46 p.m. EST: Twitter hid three separate tweets from Donald Trump Wednesday aThe Galaxy Z Fold 2 is everything the first Fold should've been
If you were to ask me to read the "room" during Samsung's virtual briefing for its new Galaxy Z FoldDog takes bite out of the mic during big local news interview
Some dogs were just born to be on camera.One pup, Stanley the Collie, recently made a big splash onDouglas, the latest step toward realistic AI, is unsettling
UPDATE: Nov. 22, 2020, 11:48 a.m. EST This story was updated to more accurately reflect how Douglas'Satellite images of Earth taken from an angle show the world in new beauty
While it's fun to explore the world by zooming around on Google Earth, there's just something uninsp