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Apple Invites

(www.apple.com)
651 points openchampagne | 115 comments | | HN request time: 2.339s | source | bottom
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lordofgibbons ◴[] No.42939855[source]
I really hope this fails.

Apple will use it's dominant position to create lock in like how they did with iMessage instead of cooperating with other platforms on a common standard.

Oder friends and family are surprised when they want to video call over Facetime and find it hard to believe other people's phones don't have Apple apps.

replies(26): >>42939966 #>>42940020 #>>42940243 #>>42940281 #>>42940379 #>>42940471 #>>42940515 #>>42940596 #>>42941069 #>>42941479 #>>42941630 #>>42941758 #>>42942136 #>>42942213 #>>42942456 #>>42942901 #>>42942937 #>>42943397 #>>42943414 #>>42943895 #>>42944072 #>>42944475 #>>42944937 #>>42944944 #>>42947436 #>>42948271 #
1. basisword ◴[] No.42941630[source]
Just a tip but sometimes it’s good to read the article before commenting.

The app allows iPhone users to create an event. Anybody on any device or browser can RSVP. The event can be shared as a link. Making an event invite app that only works for users on one platform would be pointless.

Also - non-Apple users have been able to join FaceTime calls via. A link for several years.

replies(9): >>42941671 #>>42942433 #>>42942697 #>>42943116 #>>42943706 #>>42943841 #>>42944579 #>>42945035 #>>42946797 #
2. outcoldman ◴[] No.42941671[source]
Yes, but. Most of the invited folks might have an AppleID associated with their email, that they have not used for years. And invite will ask to enter the password if you have an AppleID associated.
replies(3): >>42941694 #>>42942313 #>>42942567 #
3. kesava ◴[] No.42941694[source]
The tussle between usability and security.
4. paulcole ◴[] No.42942313[source]
Yes, but. I was hoping to express my displeasure with Apple.
5. paulryanrogers ◴[] No.42942433[source]
> Also - non-Apple users have been able to join FaceTime calls via. A link for several years.

Is the quality the same or even close? Is it easy and obvious how to share such links?

replies(2): >>42942525 #>>42942570 #
6. newsclues ◴[] No.42942525[source]
https://support.apple.com/en-ca/109364
7. NotYourLawyer ◴[] No.42942567[source]
This is a made up problem with a trivial solution.
8. codetrotter ◴[] No.42942570[source]
> Is it easy and obvious how to share such links?

I barely ever FaceTime anyone. Just now after reading your comment I opened the FaceTime app. It has two big buttons:

- Create Link

- New FaceTime

And it showed a balloon tip under create link that said:

“Invite Anyone to a Call Friends with Android and Windows devices can join a FaceTime call if you share a link.”

So yes, seems they actually made it about as obvious as it can be. Maybe even more.

replies(1): >>42943048 #
9. somethingsidont ◴[] No.42942697[source]
"With Apple Invites, users can create and easily share invitations, RSVP, contribute to Shared Albums, and engage with Apple Music playlists."

Correct me if I'm wrong:

- create & share invitations: must have iCloud+

- iCloud shared albums: barebones upload/download on non-Apple devices

- apple music: cross-platform, must be subscribed

- RSVP: cross-platform (Apple account req'd)

So yes, it "works" outside the Apple ecosystem, but missing features to encourage lock-in.

replies(2): >>42942948 #>>42943827 #
10. brailsafe ◴[] No.42942948[source]
The only problem I have with this, as an android user, is that there's probably no API available for someone to build an integration for other platforms if the market was there. I don't expect Apple to go and create cross platform clients for every service they put out, they're not a service first company, they're an Apple service first company.
replies(2): >>42943733 #>>42945478 #
11. fooblaster ◴[] No.42943048{3}[source]
nothing quite like the perspective of someone from within the walled garden
replies(1): >>42943284 #
12. yapyap ◴[] No.42943116[source]
Tbf imessage also allows people to message non iOS users but apparently the ‘color of the bubble’ has been a big thing in the U.S. among youth.
replies(3): >>42943136 #>>42943172 #>>42943209 #
13. calmworm ◴[] No.42943136[source]
The color of the bubble is, at least partially, a security feature for me. When it’s blue, I am certain there is a person on the other end, not a bot, spammer, ai, etc…
replies(1): >>42943293 #
14. satvikpendem ◴[] No.42943172[source]
> but apparently the ‘color of the bubble’ has been a big thing in the U.S. among youth

It's not the color itself that's the problem, it's that having one green user means the entire conversation falls back to SMS and thus photos, videos, etc are all degraded and you can't do more rich messaging things like reactions. This is changing with RCS but it is in Apple's interest to make it a social change rather than just a technological limitation.

replies(2): >>42943515 #>>42945042 #
15. saintfire ◴[] No.42943209[source]
I think calling it just "color of the bubble" downplays the intentional degredation of chat quality for everyone in the chat in order to encourage exclusion, presumably to create FOMO. Incidentally FOMO is a very powerful among youth, but it's still a thing for any group in some capacity.

Not that I personally cared, as i see it as an Apple flaw, but in joining a work iMessage group I had people whining about image quality and whatever other features were disabled between iMessage users while I was present.

replies(2): >>42943298 #>>42944033 #
16. lttlrck ◴[] No.42943284{4}[source]
It's the first button when you open FaceTime. Is that also too subjective?
replies(1): >>42943741 #
17. pishpash ◴[] No.42943293{3}[source]
Except it guarantees nothing of the sort.
replies(2): >>42943368 #>>42963824 #
18. plandis ◴[] No.42943298{3}[source]
The last I looked into this, iMessage offers end to end encryption and RCS doesn't by default. Apple (rightfully, IMO) refuses to use Googles non open source end to end encryption extension that also would require key exchange on Google owned servers.
replies(2): >>42943810 #>>42943977 #
19. borski ◴[] No.42943368{4}[source]
Say more.
replies(1): >>42943944 #
20. bb88 ◴[] No.42943515{3}[source]
Children care. Children also often can't afford the cost of a new iPhone.

Adults don't really give a fuck as I can tell about it.

Adults don't really give a fuck about lots of what children care about.

replies(2): >>42943573 #>>42947865 #
21. satvikpendem ◴[] No.42943573{4}[source]
Teens generally care, some adults do care too.
replies(1): >>42943637 #
22. bb88 ◴[] No.42943637{5}[source]
If you care about the color of a chat bubble, you're kind of a child, no?
replies(1): >>42943737 #
23. esolyt ◴[] No.42943706[source]
There is no indication they haven't read the article.

This product, much like iMessage and others, provides an inferior experience to non-Apple users. It aims to make other devices and operating systems look less capable and cheap.

iMessage also partially works with other phones. This doesn't change the fact that its intention is to create a lock-in effect, as evidenced by internal Apple emails.

replies(3): >>42944388 #>>42945127 #>>42946677 #
24. bloggie ◴[] No.42943733{3}[source]
Pull requests welcome.
replies(2): >>42943894 #>>42943936 #
25. satvikpendem ◴[] No.42943737{6}[source]
Like I said, it's not about the color but the features.
26. fooblaster ◴[] No.42943741{5}[source]
the experience from the opposite side is the relevant part here. I recall the many years I was sent iMessages but unable to remove my phone number so that I could receive sms messages on my new android phone. The user experience from iOS phones sending me messages I would never receive was "great".
replies(1): >>42943965 #
27. viraptor ◴[] No.42943810{4}[source]
As opposed to apples non open source solution that requires device authentication on apple owned servers... I think none of them really care about interoperability here, or they would release something open and able to do e2ee instead of this dance. I mean signal protocol is right there and available to everyone.
replies(1): >>42943910 #
28. minton ◴[] No.42943827[source]
It literally says, “...anyone can RSVP, regardless of whether they have an Apple Account or Apple device.”
replies(3): >>42944250 #>>42944911 #>>42945579 #
29. viraptor ◴[] No.42943841[source]
Yet, there's nothing iPhone specific about this idea. They didn't have to limit it in the way they did. In the future they can change the approach too and both remove and restrict features, because they will always go iPhone-first. Being able to use this in a restricted way today is just that. I share the "apple (and any corp)-first solution should fail" hope.
replies(1): >>42943902 #
30. worthless-trash ◴[] No.42943894{4}[source]
[Citation needed]
31. JohnBooty ◴[] No.42943902[source]

    In the future they can change the approach too and 
    both remove and restrict features
Unlike a lot of product categories... I don't really see a strong lock-in factor here?

Example: If you are heavily invested in Apple Music or Spotify, there's a lot of momentum there to keep you from switching. All your stuff is there (songs, favorites, playlists) and it would take a lot of time to re-find it on the other service, if it even exists there.

And streaming services like Netflix lock you in with constant reams of new content.

But what would be keeping me on some particular invite service? If I used Apple Invites for my last party two months ago... but I have decided that Apple Invites sucks now... I really don't see a lot of friction keeping me from switching away? The inconvenience would not be zero but seems minor.

replies(1): >>42944142 #
32. worthless-trash ◴[] No.42943910{5}[source]
This debate is dead, no amount of education can fix it. Any amount of logical discussion is a waste of time.
33. igor47 ◴[] No.42943936{4}[source]
Can you direct me to where I can make pull requests to unlock Apple's walled garden?
34. notpushkin ◴[] No.42943944{5}[source]
There are ways to send iMessages programmatically. Apple does check for spam, but it’s not foolproof. And of course, it won’t help you against a targeted attack.
replies(3): >>42943957 #>>42946184 #>>42963813 #
35. borski ◴[] No.42943957{6}[source]
https://support.apple.com/en-us/118246
replies(1): >>42944226 #
36. dagmx ◴[] No.42943965{6}[source]
Over those many years you didn’t bother to google that you can just turn it off online? https://support.apple.com/en-ca/102455
replies(1): >>42944394 #
37. thayne ◴[] No.42943977{4}[source]
> RCS doesn't by default

That isn't exactly accurate. The standard doesn't have e2ee, but if you use google messages with RCS with other android phone it is end to end encrypted. But it uses a proprietary google extension to RCS. But I would be surprised if google wasn't willing to work with apple to get e2ee RCS working between iMessage and google Messages, but Apple has no interest in that.

replies(1): >>42944077 #
38. JohnBooty ◴[] No.42944033{3}[source]
Poor technical understanding. It's not "degradation."

They will use the iMessage protocol if supported by all clients. If not, they fall back to the next best thing supported by all clients whether RCS or SMS/MMS. In your case (possibly before iPhones supported RCS) the "next best thing" was apparently SMS/MMS.

This is the correct behavior.

I think you're also falling into the common trap of automatically thinking whatever Android supports is like, the correct and open standard.

In reality, RCS's history was an absolute mess of incompatible implementations, pushed and owned by some of by Apple's direct competitors. It's really not any more the "correct" standard than iMessage is and it does not support E2EE outside of Google's proprietary implementation. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rich_Communication_Services#De...

replies(3): >>42944186 #>>42945815 #>>42945817 #
39. JohnBooty ◴[] No.42944077{5}[source]
Just so I understand: it's bad for Apple to have a proprietary E2EE solution, but it's good for Google to have one, and additionally it's Apple's fault for not using Google's?
replies(1): >>42944695 #
40. viraptor ◴[] No.42944142{3}[source]
You can switch. But now you also need to convince a random person that they should switch, because you can't easily use what they're using. And you may be the only one out of 10 people in the group complaining about it. Instead of their technical problem, Apple can make it a "you" social problem.
replies(3): >>42944988 #>>42945161 #>>42952918 #
41. Rohansi ◴[] No.42944186{4}[source]
At least RCS is an attempt at being a cross platform standard, even if it still sucks. iMessage is locked down to Apple devices only. Even if you reverse engineered the protocol you wouldn't be able to get it on Android because Apple will shut you down.

Best option is to just use a different app that just works on all platforms. No RCS, no iMessage.

replies(1): >>42952847 #
42. Rohansi ◴[] No.42944226{7}[source]
How exactly does any of this prevent people from sending spam to you?
43. adrr ◴[] No.42944388[source]
How so? It just sends a link either in a message or email. Acceptance is done via a web page. How do online invitations ensure vendor lock in? What will prevent me from using another online invite system in the future? I’ve used a bunch in past like evite, paperless post and the cost to switch is nothing.
replies(2): >>42944727 #>>42944943 #
44. fooblaster ◴[] No.42944394{7}[source]
It was extremely difficult to disable for a long time before it was made easy to turn it off on a website.
replies(1): >>42945117 #
45. wodenokoto ◴[] No.42944579[source]
> Making an event invite app that only works for users on one platform would be pointless.

Worked really, really well for Facebook for about a decade or so.

> Also - non-Apple users have been able to join FaceTime calls via. A link for several years.

I had no idea! TIL!

46. thayne ◴[] No.42944695{6}[source]
Standardized interoperable E2EE > Proprietary E2EE > client-to-server encryption > no encryption

It isn't as simple as "apple bad, google good". Apple/iOS having E2EE is good. Apple refusing to cooperate at all in making E2EE interoperable with non apple products is bad. Google/Android having E2EE is good, and better than the claim above that RCS doesn't have E2EE by default. The fact that it is a proprietary extension is bad, but they seem more willing to interoperate. That said, if the positions were reversed, I suspect Google would also be more resistant to interoperability.

replies(3): >>42945509 #>>42946165 #>>43079627 #
47. ejoso ◴[] No.42944727{3}[source]
It is a degraded experience. Not as smooth as being on iOS. It’s a common playbook used by Apple (as well as MS and others) in an attempt to get and retain users.
replies(1): >>42944982 #
48. d0mine ◴[] No.42944911{3}[source]
[ignore, I've misread] ~~In that case, you must have iCloud+ subscription~~
replies(1): >>42945409 #
49. onion2k ◴[] No.42944943{3}[source]
Two of the features of Invites are sharing photos and sharing music. These are both locked down to users of Apple services (Photos and Music). So you can invite anyone, but those people won't be able to fully participate in your event.

There's nothing really wrong with Invites if you're happy to only have photos from people with iPhones or to let the music be exclusively chosen by Apple users, but you can't pretend it's a fair and equal system.

replies(1): >>42944998 #
50. mjamil ◴[] No.42944982{4}[source]
Why would the stewards of a walled garden want other gardens (walled or otherwise) be as good as theirs? What moral or economic imperative exists for such a belief?

Why is that bad?

replies(1): >>42945215 #
51. lloeki ◴[] No.42944988{4}[source]
Still valid for:

  s/Apple Invites/Meta Messenger groups/
  s/Apple Invites/Facebook events/
  s/Apple Invites/WhatsApp groups/
  s/Apple Invites/Telegram groups
  s/Apple Invites/doodle.com/
These are the things people use around here to organise events. Four of those require a persistent account and an app, three of those are Meta for which I'm the loner yelling that I won't touch them with a 10 yard pole and a hazmat suit.

What are you proposing instead? That these should all be decentralised/federated? SMS/RCS? Matrix? email? ICS?

replies(5): >>42945321 #>>42945353 #>>42945733 #>>42945751 #>>42946916 #
52. treesknees ◴[] No.42944998{4}[source]
Depends on how you define locked down. Apple Music has been available on the Google Play store for years [1] and also supports listening in a web browser on any operating system [2]. I do agree Photos could use some cross-platform improvements.

[1] https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.apple.andr...

[2] https://support.apple.com/guide/music-web/welcome/web

53. pbreit ◴[] No.42945035[source]
Your "tips" don't really address the OP's post.
54. lloeki ◴[] No.42945042{3}[source]
> the entire conversation falls back to SMS

> it is in Apple's interest to make it a social change rather than just a technological limitation.

It is a technical requirement? How would non-iMessage users respond to the whole group including the ones on iMessage?

When you sit for 5min and think about the whole flow across a bunch of message exchanges every other way there's really no other technical solution than downgrading the whole conversation to SMS/RCS.

replies(3): >>42945077 #>>42945758 #>>42945785 #
55. satvikpendem ◴[] No.42945077{4}[source]
RCS is not a downgrade, it can also be E2E encrypted but Apple's implementation doesn't use it. It is entirely a business decision to not support the full capabilities of RCS as the iMessage sender system.
replies(1): >>42945468 #
56. azinman2 ◴[] No.42945117{8}[source]
So aren’t you happy things got better?
57. pinoy420 ◴[] No.42945127[source]
Why is this a problem?

Typical HN downvoting because of “muh vendor lockin” without giving an answer as to why exactly this matters for the general population.

It is a fantastic business model.

replies(1): >>42946145 #
58. gf000 ◴[] No.42945161{4}[source]
The other side only sees a link. They don't even care which service that link originates from, they just press yes and that's it.

With all due respect, seeing anything more malicious is just extending your own emotions against apple to the topic.

replies(1): >>42945757 #
59. TeMPOraL ◴[] No.42945215{5}[source]
> Why would the stewards of a walled garden want other gardens (walled or otherwise) be as good as theirs? What moral (...) imperative exists for such a belief?

Not being an asshole? It's normal instinct unless one's brain has been thoroughly eaten by competitiveness.

> Why is that bad?

Because in this, Apple is attacking the commons. They're trying to provide an alternative to normal invite system - one that's been established and battle-tested over decades, one that works okay-ish across any device, real or virtual, on any platform, and one that people know how to use. An alternative that gives some bells and whistles exclusively to the Apple users, and perhaps even is more ergonomic in practice. An alternative that overlaps with the commons just enough to perhaps get the significant chunk of Apple-first userbase to switch over, but purposefully doesn't overlap enough to work well for non-Apple users (as well as professional users).

Take commons, drive a wedge down the side, use it as lever for your massive userbase to push everyone else off it. Screw everyone else. Hell, even screw your own users too for having Android users (or Windows or Linux desktop users!) among family and friends. The next generation of users should remember that thou shalt only befriend and marry people from within your corporate community.

replies(1): >>42948579 #
60. viraptor ◴[] No.42945321{5}[source]
Ideally, yes, distributed. But otherwise almost every calendar service allows events with invited people. Even if each of those services is closed itself, they're all expected to work with any email client and browser. And then you... email messages.
61. ◴[] No.42945353{5}[source]
62. sgt ◴[] No.42945409{4}[source]
I tried this and RSVP'd with an email that didn't have an Apple account, and it asked me to created an Apple account.

I originally created the event using my own Apple account which definitely has iCloud+. So how do I create an event that someone without an Apple account can RSVP to?

replies(1): >>42945855 #
63. sbuk ◴[] No.42945468{5}[source]
The only implementation of E2E RCS is Google's Jibe, which is a proprietary, non-standard version. There is no mention of encryption in the spec other than to say that it's up to carriers to determine. Apple, in contrast to Google's proprietary approach, has offered to work with carriers and the GSMA to define a common set of standards for encryption.
replies(1): >>42945484 #
64. TeMPOraL ◴[] No.42945478{3}[source]
That's a big problem though. They're targeting a class of use cases currently covered by iCalendar family of open protocols[0] and handled by every calendar and e-mail app there is. Because of their narrowed focus on features most relevant to individuals, families and groups of friends, they'll be able to deliver a superior experience there for people on their platform - and they have both enough users and the correct placement in the "tech stack" (unlike e.g. Facebook/Meta or other social platforms, that already tried and failed to pull it off) to break universality of iCal for everyone else.

If this sticks, it won't only screw you or me over as Android users with Apple users in our friends groups. This will quickly bubble up from friend gatherings to community groups and local services businesses. At some point, you'll find that your kids' kindergarten or your stylist or even your doctor starts sending you Apple Invites instead of e-mail invites (.ics), because the Apple variant also comes with a shared photo album. It's actually surprising when you notice just how many appointments could use a shared photo and/or document collection directly linked to them - that part is actually a good idea from Apple. It's just sad that they're weaponizing it instead of improving what already works for everyone.

--

[0] - https://icalendar.org/RFC-Specifications/all/

replies(2): >>42945796 #>>42969046 #
65. satvikpendem ◴[] No.42945484{6}[source]
I never said it wasn't proprietary, just that Apple doesn't use it currently. It's fine to offer to work with carriers, but for people right now, it's non-viable to use RCS with iMessage.
replies(1): >>42946000 #
66. sbuk ◴[] No.42945509{7}[source]
So, explain exactly who Google is collaborating with by offering support for Jibe exclusively for certified Android devices with Google Play Services and only available through their proprietary messaging app.

> That said, if the positions were reversed, I suspect Google would also be more resistant to interoperability.

With Apple adding support to iOS for RCS, the shoe is on the other foot.

67. TeMPOraL ◴[] No.42945579{3}[source]
Anyone can RSVP, but only Apple users can fully partake in it.

Also, per sgt's comment below, it seems it works the same way as sharing documents via OneDrive. "Share with anyone, doesn't require sign-in". That is the actual text from the Share dialog in Windows 11. "Doesn't require sign-in". Well, except if you're sharing more than one document under a link - then it forces recipients to sign in with an account. It's even documented in the on-line help for the feature, just not mentioned in the UI. Also, when you share a single document, while sign-in truly isn't required, the link still leads to a login page that urges signing in or creating an account, and just has this tiny, barely noticeable link to access without login, tucked in the corner somewhere.

(I miss Dropbox's "Public" folder from a decade ago. That was the first and last time sharing documents from web drives made sense.)

68. TeMPOraL ◴[] No.42945733{5}[source]
ICS, yes. Like most event services that aren't Meta work with.

ICS + e-mail is the established standard. It works, and has worked for decades, to the point people don't think about it in terms other than just "calendar invites".

69. ascorbic ◴[] No.42945751{5}[source]
None of those require buying hundreds of dollars worth of hardware
70. TeMPOraL ◴[] No.42945757{5}[source]
> They don't even care which service that link originates from, they just press yes and that's it.

There's a reason Apple integrates shared photo albums with Invites. It's actually something useful to be linked with an invite in almost all non-corporate use cases. And I bet you this feature will remain broken for non-Apple users.

71. ◴[] No.42945758{4}[source]
72. ascorbic ◴[] No.42945785{4}[source]
The solution is the same one used by every other messaging app: allow iMessage on Android. There is no technical thing stopping them. Instead they actively take measures to prevent it from working.
replies(1): >>42945896 #
73. lilyball ◴[] No.42945796{4}[source]
I can't say I've ever received an event invitation via iCalendar. Getting an .ics download for an event to put it on my calendar, sure, but that's not an invite, it's just a read-only event.
replies(1): >>42946179 #
74. TheDong ◴[] No.42945815{4}[source]
All the other messenger apps you can use on iOS, like whatsapp, telegram, signal, etc, have no degradation with android users present.

Why can't apple publish an iMessage app for linux, windows, and android? Telegram and signal have no trouble maintaining applications for this, and they've got far less money than apple does.

RCS and SMS have been a total mess, yes, but every other chat protocol I've used has been better than iMessage in terms of supporting cross-platform communication. It's only iMessage which fails at this fundamental part of being a communication app, that of being available on multiple platforms.

I know you're going to say "the reason is spam, you need to pay apple $700 to get a device capable of iMessage, and they can ban by device, which deters spam"... which okay, fine, make iMessage be a $15/mo subscription to use on any non-iOS devices, that'd solve the spam problem just fine while still letting android users join back into the family group message chat again.

replies(1): >>42946063 #
75. ascorbic ◴[] No.42945817{4}[source]
> They will use the iMessage protocol if supported by all clients.

Which would be perfectly reasonable if they allowed clients on other platforms. It just happens that the only clients are the ones that require buying Apple hardware. If the iMessage ptotocol is so great (I don't know enough about it to say), then great - either release an app for Android, or let others do it. Until then it's not a standard, open or otherwise.

replies(1): >>42953182 #
76. dwaite ◴[] No.42945855{5}[source]
I don't know - I was able share a link and RSVP without an account. AFAIK I enabled every option other than the shared album.

It does prefer contacting via email, so it did an email verification via mailed PIN, and then attached that email to the guest list from the link.

77. dwaite ◴[] No.42945896{5}[source]
So your solution is to reject people from participating in a group chat until they install an Apple product on their Android phone?
replies(1): >>42945998 #
78. TheDong ◴[] No.42945998{6}[source]
That's better than the current option.

If people want to group SMS they should open their phone's SMS app. If people want to group iMessage they should all open iMessage. If people want to chat on signal, they should all open signal.

Unfortunately, iMessage is bizarrely both iOS's SMS app and a custom signal-like chat protocol, but the user can't pick between the protocols easily and it switches between them in an opaque way.

It's just a bizarrely bad UX by a company that supposedly is good at UX, and the only purpose it seems to serve is to provide this broken green-bubble experience.

I'd much rather if iOS just had "iMessage" as an app without SMS, had "SMS" as an app for only SMS/MMS/RCS, and then allowed android users to make an apple account and install iMessage (possible with an optional 1-time fee to prevent spam, like having to buy a $700 iPhone and throw it away as a sorta "proof of work" in order to make a iMessage-for-android account. This isn't too different from how some of my friends do this now, with a mac mini in their closet for iMessage which they remote desktop into if they want to chat to iPhone using friends, and use for nothing else).

79. dwaite ◴[] No.42946000{7}[source]
While there is no public documentation on Google's approach that I know of, there is also nothing to make me think Apple _can_ currently use it.

There is no authoritative mapping from an account to a single service (e.g. my email address as an Apple account vs a Google accounts vs a WhatsApp account), which also means that if all three of these services say they have an account for me and advertise a public key, there is no way to know that account or public key are authoritative. Google's implementation requires you to use both their client and their hosted service, meaning it almost certainly assumes that all E2E keys can be resolved authoritatively from a single source (Google's table).

You instead need a way to look up accounts in a secure and auditable way across multiple authoritative services, like the IETF Key Transparency work (that isn't complete yet).

It is also important to realize that Apple's support for alternative messaging systems besides iMessage is to meet carrier requirements, not user requirements. Apple's slow uptake on RCS AFAIK was because carriers themselves didn't care, until governments began to regulate it needed to be supported on handsets. The carrier RCS support almost universally is because Google wanted it for Android, which is also why Google's RCS hosted service is by far the most deployed by carriers.

The GSMA needs to define those carrier requirements for E2E RCS, and Apple has stated publicly they are working with them on that.

80. dwaite ◴[] No.42946063{5}[source]
> All the other messenger apps you can use on iOS, like whatsapp, telegram, signal, etc, have no degradation with android users present

Yes, those all work and each require that you download and install their app, go through setup, potentially some identity verification steps, etc.

If you want that functionality, all of them are available as options.

What would make an Apple iMessage app for Android better than any of them? Unlike today, Android users would have the same experience for any of these other apps - completely excluded from conversations until everyone agrees upon an app, downloads it, creates an account and exchanges whatever addresses, nicknames or QR codes necessary to join a group.

The only thing that an Apple iMessage app buys the group is a better experience for the _Apple_ users. It actually increases lock-in to Apple's services, both because now Android users are signing up for Apple services to to communicate with their groups, and because Apple users know they can just reject other options because the Android people can "make iMessage work".

replies(1): >>42951365 #
81. abenga ◴[] No.42946145{3}[source]
Because we want to interact with our friends and family without being forced to switch platforms. I don't care about Apple's business model.
replies(4): >>42946472 #>>42947057 #>>42948157 #>>42952861 #
82. dwaite ◴[] No.42946165{7}[source]
Google is not cooperating with anyone when it comes to their existing proprietary E2EE implementation. E2EE is available in Google's client only, able to be run on the Android devices Google certifies, when talking through Google's RCS server.

That is because the core of their security model is a centralized key server, outside of the rest of RCS, that acts as the source of truth for an account and its associated public keys.

That fails once you have accounts which are not being authoritatively managed by Google, e.g. an email address with multiple messaging services attached, or a phone number which may be managed by any number of third party RCS installations. That is a problem which is still being actively solved.

83. jrowen ◴[] No.42946179{5}[source]
Yeah I think this is targeting Facebook Events (which they seem like they've been trying to kill off anyway) and Partiful more than calendar meetings/appointments.
84. dwaite ◴[] No.42946184{6}[source]
I can count the total automated iMessage spams I've received on one hand. I can't do that with automated SMS spam I received in the last 24 hours.

So yes, not foolproof.

85. what-the-grump ◴[] No.42946472{4}[source]
So interact with them? This doesn’t stop you in any way.
86. sharpshadow ◴[] No.42946677[source]
I would rather join an Apple Invite Group than a WhatsApp Group.

If they now make it possible to invite people in your radius they even get a share of dating apps.

replies(1): >>42946784 #
87. fsflover ◴[] No.42946784{3}[source]
How about a Matrix group? https://matrix.org
replies(1): >>42948035 #
88. lordofgibbons ◴[] No.42946797[source]
Sometimes it's also good to stop worshiping trillion dollar companies who abuse their market dominance.

While tech-literate Apple users couldn't tell the difference, their images and videos were sent in potato quality to non-Apple devices. So while technically, they could communicate with non-Apple users, it was a bad experience for anyone not in "walled garden".

p.s Not taking features put out by Apple at face-value doesn't mean I didn't read the article.

89. pmontra ◴[] No.42946916{5}[source]
The difference is that all of them work cross devices. That's why I only get video calls with WhatsApp and I never get one using one of the many video call apps of Google. I learned today, by reading this thread, that somebody could have sent me a link to a Facetime call. I never got one. Everybody in my country use WhatsApp for video calls (maybe somebody is videocalling with Facebook Messenger or Facetime, very few with Telegram) and nobody has to worry about which mobile OS the other person have. WhatsApp has commoditized both iPhones and Androids here. When people choose to buy a phone they don't think about how they'll make calls or send messages. They install WhatsApp, because they have to or they won't call and message a lot of people, and the problem is solved.

Edit: by the way, probably every single phone has builtin interoperable 1 to 1 video calls from the days of 3G. I remember testing them in late 2002 / early 2003. They worked and probably still work unless they retired the standard because everybody is using apps.

replies(1): >>42952949 #
90. GiorgioG ◴[] No.42947057{4}[source]
The self-entitlement is getting old. Nobody's forcing you to switch platforms. If your Apple-friends send you an invite, you will not be shunned from the event. Yes even the uncool non-Apple users will be allowed to participate in said invite.
replies(1): >>42949228 #
91. HDThoreaun ◴[] No.42947865{4}[source]
Im an adult and cant stand sms. It makes texting unowrkable.
92. echelon_musk ◴[] No.42948035{4}[source]
I'm sure Matrix users are a great dating pool.
replies(1): >>42948278 #
93. Longhanks ◴[] No.42948157{4}[source]
If you feel your ability to interact with your friends and family is threatened by some business launching a service, you should seriously question your friends and family and/or your and/or their social/communication skills.
replies(1): >>42948219 #
94. thoroughburro ◴[] No.42948219{5}[source]
Help, I followed your advice and alienated a bunch of people I need in my life. Will you support me now??
95. fsflover ◴[] No.42948278{5}[source]
Indeed, they're likely more educated than the average.
96. krger ◴[] No.42948579{6}[source]
>They're trying to provide an alternative to normal invite system - one that's been established and battle-tested over decades, one that works okay-ish across any device, real or virtual, on any platform, and one that people know how to use.

And if the people who try Invites discover that it isn't, in fact, superior to this "normal invite system"—whatever you believe it to be—that you claim is "established and battle-tested," they won't continue using it and will go back to what they were doing before.

>An alternative that gives some bells and whistles exclusively to the Apple users, and perhaps even is more ergonomic in practice.

Do you believe that all vendors should be forbidden from shipping any new application or feature that doesn't offer full interoperability and feature parity with everybody else or is that a limitation you believe should be applied only to Apple?

97. pinoy420 ◴[] No.42949228{5}[source]
Got to love the HN bubble. Anti anti apple is immediate downvote even with a sensible argument like yourself…
98. TheDong ◴[] No.42951365{6}[source]
I want Apple iMessage to be clearer on iOS.

Right now, iOS users can't as easily understand the difference between iMessage and SMS, and I think it would make what's happening clearer to users if the apps were separate.

If you opened the "SMS" app to get your sms 2fa codes and talk to android users, and your "iMessage" app separately to talk to iPhone users, it would make people less mad when they open their iMessage app to iMessage, and instead weirdly get green bubble SMS.

It would be like if when I installed the "firefox" app on iOS it instead installed "safari" and touching the "firefox" icon opened "safari", and didn't have any firefox addons. Oh weird, sorry, bad example.

The point is not that iMessage is better than whatsapp, it's not. The point is that iPhone users try to use iMessage, and right now apple's weird SMS integration with it makes them accidentally use SMS and get annoyed.

replies(1): >>42952704 #
99. JohnBooty ◴[] No.42952704{7}[source]

    The point is that iPhone users try to use 
    iMessage, and right now apple's weird SMS 
    integration with it makes them accidentally 
    use SMS and get annoyed.
I disagree that the "annoyed" people are "trying to use iMessage." I think they're just trying to message their friends. They are annoyed because the only common protocol supported by all parties in the conversation kind of sucks sometimes.

Apple has made the correct set of trade offs. If you just want to send a text message and don't care about the particulars you can do that and you'll automagically get the best possible experience based on the best lowest common denominator protocol whether it is iMessage, RCS, or SMS.

And if you and your buddies are savvy enough to want more than that you can install Signal or Whatsapp or whatever.

But that baseline out-of-the-box experience for mobile phones has always been "if I have somebody's number I can text/call them using my phone's out-of-the-box functionality and the network sorts out the details."

I think it's kind of nuts to throw that in the trash and you don't appreciate what a huge step backwards that would be for most of the people who buy and use phones.

Also, would you not agree that out of the box E2EE is a huge deal!?

But the keys and key exchange protocol for E2EE have to be managed by somebody. Signal, Google, Apple, whoever.

replies(1): >>42972000 #
100. JohnBooty ◴[] No.42952847{5}[source]

    At least RCS is an attempt at being a cross platform 
    standard, even if it still sucks.
The E2EE part, which does not exist in the RCS standard itself, is a proprietary Google thing with keys managed by Google. It is not open, and opening it is not trivial because somebody has to be an authoritative key source etc.

If not for that part I'd agree with you.

    Best option is to just use a different app that just works 
    on all platforms. No RCS, no iMessage.
Well, I think there's obviously a huge place for these apps and there always has been. There is certainly nothing stopping you and your buddies from all standardizing on Signal, Telegram, or uh.... buying the rights to ICQ and resurrecting that or whatever.

The value of iMessage/RCS/SMS is that it is effectively universal. I just need somebody's mobile number and I can call or text them. They are (more or less) guaranteed to be able to receive that call or text. I can buy the most advanced iPhone or Pixel and I can send a text message to some dude on a 2001 flip phone in a jungle somewhere. That is a huge huge huge value.

replies(1): >>42957055 #
101. therealfigtree ◴[] No.42952861{4}[source]
This is a weird way to think about it. You are basically saying a company should not launch something exclusive to their platform or ecosystem, but rather should consider launch a generic product compatible with everything out there. Why would they ? How will they stand different if everyone does that ?

Exclusivity is a basic part of business model. Look at PS4 with exclusive titles. Hell, look at your local store with exclusive products only available in their stores.

I would have agreed with you if Apple had done this for a basic feature like calling. But this sure is a privileged feature and there is nothing wrong in making it exclusive to iPhone (but they haven't you see).

102. JohnBooty ◴[] No.42952918{4}[source]

    But now you also need to convince a random person that they should switch,
This seems logically and factually untrue based on what Apple has stated.

From https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2025/02/introducing-apple-inv... --

    "Guests can view and respond to an invitation using the 
    new iPhone app or on the web without needing an iCloud+ 
    subscription or an Apple Account."
They don't need to buy an Apple device or create an account. (I would assume that they get a text message with some sort of unique individual URL, and from there they can respond to or view the invite)

So I do not follow when you claim that I would need to convince all my friends to "switch." Can you elaborate?

103. JohnBooty ◴[] No.42952949{6}[source]
You (like quite a few others) didn't read the linked press release which would have been a good prerequisite for joining this conversation. I guess you really just wanted to unload on your least favorite tech company.

I did read the press release, and this seems pretty open.

From https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2025/02/introducing-apple-inv...

    "Guests can view and respond to an invitation using the 
    new iPhone app or on the web without needing an iCloud+ 
    subscription or an Apple Account."
So what's objectionable about this?

Your buddy can invite you to a party using this thing and you can RSVP without installing an app or creating an account. That sounds pretty good to me. You have a web browser, right?

104. JohnBooty ◴[] No.42953182{5}[source]

    If the iMessage ptotocol is so great (I don't know enough about it to say),
Well, it supports bigger images, read statuses, and fun effects that aren't a part of SMS. But what's important to a lot of people like me is that it's automatically E2EE if all recipients are on iMessage.

I would hope that anybody on HN considers that rather important.

Silicon Valley and engineers in general have really fucking changed if having a large portion of the phone-using population getting automagical E2EE is no longer a big deal.

    Until then it's not a standard, open or otherwise.
Are you holding Google to this same standard? RCS is open-ish, but the E2EE extensions are proprietary and the key exchange is managed by Google. They are not opening that up, or at least they have not said that they are.

E2EE is not exactly trivial to make "open" because somebody has got to manage the key exchange. This is true for Signal, etc.... Signal handles the key exchange.

I would have a problem with Apple's conduct here if they locked you out of alternatives.

But I think their approach is correct. You get a default E2EE experience that works between Apple devices. But you are not prevented from any other messaging network you might want to use.

In some ways this is admittedly like Microsoft enforcing their web monopoly by making Internet Explorer the default browser back in the day, but I think it is different in crucial ways and I think E2EE is a worthy and necessary goal.

replies(1): >>42954293 #
105. ascorbic ◴[] No.42954293{6}[source]
> Well, it supports bigger images, read statuses, and fun effects that aren't a part of SMS. But what's important to a lot of people like me is that it's automatically E2EE if all recipients are on iMessage.

Yes, obviously it's better than SMS. That's a 40-year old standard. I don't think I've sent an SMS to a human in over a decade. I mean is it better than other modern messenger protocols.

> Are you holding Google to this same standard? RCS is open-ish, but the E2EE extensions are proprietary and the key exchange is managed by Google. They are not opening that up, or at least they have not said that they are.

My objection to iMessage isn't that it's proprietary. It's that it's closed, and restricted to one platform.

> But I think their approach is correct. You get a default E2EE experience that works between Apple devices. But you are not prevented from any other messaging network you might want to use.

There is no way to justify restricting it to Apple devices aside from vendor lock-in. They say they care about E2EE, but then make it impossible to work with conversations with most devices in the world.

106. Rohansi ◴[] No.42957055{6}[source]
The value you are talking about is all because of SMS. It's the lowest common denominator and IMO shouldn't be combined into a single app.

And there's definitely no reason why either iMessage or RCS E2EE need to be locked to a specific platform. Signal, WhatsApp, etc just work everywhere with no quirks when messaging people on different platforms.

107. calmworm ◴[] No.42963813{6}[source]
If there are ways, please share any documentation you have on it. I haven't found anything useful, myself.
replies(1): >>42969200 #
108. calmworm ◴[] No.42963824{4}[source]
Care to explain or provide any source for this?
109. brailsafe ◴[] No.42969046{4}[source]
Do you have a personal stylist or doctor that sends you direct calendar invites?

Usually a friend just DMs me and tells me to show up somewhere.

110. notpushkin ◴[] No.42969200{7}[source]
I didn’t research it that much, but a good place to start would be AirMessage [1] or Mautrix [2]. Both of these require a Mac to work – it might work on a Hackintosh, though, or maybe using same tricks those forks of OpenHaystack use to run without a Mac (no pointers here, sorry). Hope this helps!

[1]: https://github.com/airmessage/airmessage-server

[2]: https://github.com/mautrix/imessage

replies(1): >>42979893 #
111. gvurrdon ◴[] No.42972000{8}[source]
Indeed. Pretty much everyone I know is "texting" with their friends and using whatever is the default app on their phone. Some people will use Whatsapp for specific groups/events, but that default text app is very commonly used.

This reminds me of a conversation with an iPhone-using elderly relative who wanted to text friends in their retirement home:

ER: Why is it that when I send text messages to my friends they sometimes never get them?

Me: When you get messages are the bubbles green?

ER: Yes.

Me: Is there bad phone signal in this area?

ER: Yes.

Me: OK, that means your friends are using Android phones, so your messages are being sent by a method called 'SMS' which isn't very reliable, particularly when phone signal is poor.

ER: I don't really understand that. What I can I do to fix it?

Me: You and your friends could install an app such as Whatsapp or Signal and send your texts with that.

ER: No, I'm not installing an app!

Me: You could persuade your friends to buy iPhones.

ER: They won't do that.

Me: You could wait a few months and Apple will most likely activate a new system called "RCS" on iPhones which might make messages with your friends a bit more reliable.

ER: That's no good, I need to fix it now.

etc. etc.

replies(1): >>42972088 #
112. dagw ◴[] No.42972088{9}[source]
being sent by a method called 'SMS' which isn't very reliable, particularly when phone signal is poor...

Not that it is relevant to overall point, but this is the exact opposite of my experience. I've been in plenty of situations where it is impossible to make calls because the signal is so bad, but communicating with SMS has worked perfectly. As my signal gets weaker and weaker, SMS is always the last thing to fail.

replies(1): >>42973946 #
113. gvurrdon ◴[] No.42973946{10}[source]
Interesting. I don't think I've noticed that, but I have run into various issues with SMS when there's poor signal. On one occasion I could receive but could not send, just at the perfect time when someone was waiting for me and I was unable to get to them.
114. calmworm ◴[] No.42979893{8}[source]
Thank you.
115. JohnBooty ◴[] No.43079627{7}[source]

    Standardized interoperable E2EE 
This isn't the thing you want it to be. Somebody has to broker connections and/or key exchange.

You don't get to arbitrarily send messages to the device of somebody on the other side of the world unless a 3rd party is providing those services.