> The non-E2EE client-server data is stored encrypted sparsed out in various servers to different countries.
Yet all this data available to any person connecting to Telegram API endpoints. It's really doesn't matter how they distributed storage look like underneath if there is point where everything available as plain text.
Also this is just "trust me bro" encryption. You cant check any of it.
> Wrong again. I actually recently checked this for myself their official clients on Android and Linux desktop have support for MTProto 2.0.
E2EE in telegram is burdensome to use. It's just fact for anyone who actually used it daily.
Also many desktop versions only gained E2EE capabilities relatively recently.
Yet all this data available to any person connecting to Telegram API endpoints. It's really doesn't matter how they distributed storage look like underneath if there is point where everything available as plain text.
Also this is just "trust me bro" encryption. You cant check any of it.
> Wrong again. I actually recently checked this for myself their official clients on Android and Linux desktop have support for MTProto 2.0.
E2EE in telegram is burdensome to use. It's just fact for anyone who actually used it daily.
Also many desktop versions only gained E2EE capabilities relatively recently.