3 min read
The Status network today integrated into its app a fork of the Whisper messaging protocol that's designed to make it more scalable.
Whisper is a peer-to-peer communication protocol, built on Ethereum, that launched in 2016. It allows decentralized applications to communicate with each other, and also functions as a messaging protocol.
The app lets you send information—and money—with messages. Image: Status.
The fork, called Waku, can support 10,000 daily active users—ten times as many as its predecessor—with the hope of making its protocol more secure than ever.
“It helps the entire network because the more peers in the messaging network, the more censorship-resistant and usable it ultimately becomes,” Jonny Zerah, who head’s Status’s marketing efforts, told Decrypt. It's integrated into the new version of the Status app, which came out today.
According to its Wiki page, Whisper’s advantage over conventional messenger apps (like WhatsApp) is that two correspondents need know nothing about each other apart from a hash. A hash is a long string of alphanumeric digits calculated through a complex process.
Additionally, because it’s a peer-to-peer protocol, it can’t be shut down easily. “The client-server model,” like WhatsApp’s, “introduces centralized choke points which can lead to censorship, data leaks, and even become attack vectors,” said Zerah. If one server is compromised, then that could put its users’ personal information at risk.
But Whisper, and now its fork, Waku, hides the location of the sender and receiver when sending messages. An encrypted version of the sender’s message is broadcast to multiple people in the network, which bounces around the network before arriving at its intended recipient. This makes it good for privacy.
The problem with Whisper is that, when more people use the app, it becomes more resource-intensive.
As Whisper reaches around one thousand daily active users, it uses 100 megabytes per day. That number quickly increases as more people join the network, draining data and battery. This is partly because Whisper broadcasts a lot of unnecessary information, said Status.
But Waku doesn’t broadcast as much unnecessary information as Whisper.
These extensions specifically allow for resource-limited devices to optimize their bandwidth by not requesting an overwhelming amount of information not pertinent to the messages they are interested in or further relaying them off to other nodes in the network," Corey Petty, Chief Security Officer at Status, told Decrypt.
“This update helps those with resource-restricted devices the most at this point. Those who are using older smartphones and with limited data plans,” said Zerah.
The tradeoff is privacy. Waku nodes receive a lot less information that’s not intended for them—the sort of information that’s bounced around the network to obfuscate users’ identity. As a result, it’s slightly easier to work out the identity of a user.
"It should be stressed that every message is still encrypted multiple times depending on its recipients, and a relaying node does not have personal information about the contents of the message. The information a node can gather about its peers is still severely limited to network level metadata," said Petty.
He said that those worried about the small decrease in privacy "can recapture it by running their own relay node and connect to it as there is no strict reliance on Status to provide service."
Turns out privacy does come at a cost.
Editor's note: This article has been updated after publication to show that messages are not sent or held on the blockchain. Comments from Corey Petty, Status's Chief Security Officer, have also been added.
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