“Las fuerzas de seguridad egipcias abrieron fuego contra un camión israelí, los soldados de las FDI respondieron al fuego y se detectaron bajas entre las FDI”.
🇬🇧 Hebrew Media Reports:
"Egyptian security forces opened fire on an Israeli truck, IDF soldiers responded to the fire and casualties were detected among the IDF."
“Las fuerzas de seguridad egipcias abrieron fuego contra un camión israelí, los soldados de las FDI respondieron al fuego y se detectaron bajas entre las FDI”.
🇬🇧 Hebrew Media Reports:
"Egyptian security forces opened fire on an Israeli truck, IDF soldiers responded to the fire and casualties were detected among the IDF."
Secure video calling is in high demand. As an alternative to Zoom, many people are using end-to-end encrypted apps such as WhatsApp, FaceTime or Signal to speak to friends and family face-to-face since coronavirus lockdowns started to take place across the world. There’s another option—secure communications app Telegram just added video calling to its feature set, available on both iOS and Android. The new feature is also super secure—like Signal and WhatsApp and unlike Zoom (yet), video calls will be end-to-end encrypted.
Why Telegram?
Telegram has no known backdoors and, even though it is come in for criticism for using proprietary encryption methods instead of open-source ones, those have yet to be compromised. While no messaging app can guarantee a 100% impermeable defense against determined attackers, Telegram is vulnerabilities are few and either theoretical or based on spoof files fooling users into actively enabling an attack.