What is Signal? The basics of the most secure messaging app. (2024)

What is Signal? The basics of the most secure messaging app. (1)

End-to-end encrypted, customizable timeframes for disappearing messages, run by a non-profit organization that collects no data on users. What's not to love?Credit: Thomas Trutschel/Photothek via Getty Images

The secure messaging app Signal has been around for years but, in 2021, it saw a huge spike in users after a heightened awareness of the need for privacy. Now, the app is used by over 40 million people(Opens in a new window).

Known for its end-to-end encryption and independent structure as a non-profit organization run by a foundation — not a big tech company — Signal has previously been the communication method of choice for activists, people in the hacker community, and others concerned about privacy.

In recent years, Signal has also been investing in more infrastructure and features(Opens in a new window) to support its users. That's a good thing: Signal first saw an increase in users in the spring of 2020 as people participating in anti-racist protests around the murder of George Floyd realized how closely law enforcement was surveilling them(Opens in a new window) and asking companies to hand over user data(Opens in a new window). It’s only become more popular since then.

So, thinking about joining Signal? Bottom line: If you care about privacy, it’s a good idea. Here’s what you need to know.

OK, so what is Signal?

Signal is a free, privacy-focused messaging and voice talk app you can use on Apple(Opens in a new window) and Android(Opens in a new window) smartphones, and via desktop. All you need is a phone number to join. You can text or make voice or video calls with friends, either one-on-one or in groups, and use emoji reactions or stickers just like in other apps. But there’s one big difference: Signal is actually really private.

Is the Signal app secure?

Communications on Signal are end-to-end encrypted, which means only the people in messages can see the content of those messages — not even the company itself. Even sticker packs get their own special encryption(Opens in a new window).

Signal created the encryption protocol(Opens in a new window) (basically, the technical way you implement this) that other companies including WhatsApp and Skype use. Plainly put, it is the gold standard of privacy.

Is Signal really private?

Yes — and that privacy goes beyond the fact that the content of your messages is encrypted. You can set messages to disappear after certain customizable time frames. Plus, Signal collects virtually no data on its users. The only information you give the app is your phone number. If the police come knocking to Signal for data on its users, it says, truthfully, that it has no data to hand over.

Tweet may have been deleted(opens in a new tab)(Opens in a new window)

Part of the reason it doesn't collect any data is because Signal is a non-profit organization, not a for-profit company. It has no advertising and, therefore, no incentive to track users. Instead, it’s funded by grants and private investors — one of whom had a huge personal interest in making a privacy-oriented platform. Though a small group of privacy activists(Opens in a new window) created Signal in 2013, it has grown in recent years. In 2018, WhatsApp founder Brian Acton donated $50 million(Opens in a new window) to create the Signal Foundation, which now runs Signal. Acton got on board with the mission to make a truly private messaging service after Facebook acquired WhatsApp and Acton reportedly left the company amid clashes with Facebook(Opens in a new window) over how it was eroding WhatsApp’s privacy.

Signal vs. WhatsApp (and other messaging apps).

Both Signal and WhatsApp are end-to-end encrypted using the same technology. That means the content of the messages you send and calls you have are both private. However, Facebook collects lots of other information in the form of usage statistics, metadata, and more. And there’s no longer a way to opt out.

Tweet may have been deleted(opens in a new tab)(Opens in a new window)

Signal does not have as many fancy customization features as WhatsApp, like backgrounds, and when it comes to true privacy, there is no comparison. But if you're looking for options, there are plenty of alternatives to Facebook-owned messaging services.

Another app rising in popularity is Telegram(Opens in a new window). Telegram says it’s also all about privacy, but it actually has plenty of downsides. Messages on Telegram are not truly end-to-end encrypted by default. Plus, the fact that private groups are unlimited in size, can be joined via a link, and are explicitly not moderated has made it a hotbed for toxic and illegal content, like terrorism and non-consensual p*rnography. Signal does not moderate content either, but it limits groups to 1,000 users and is more about communicating with people who are actual contacts than joining groups of strangers, like on WhatsApp and Telegram.

How to join Signal

You can find Signal in Apple’s App Store(Opens in a new window) or in the Google Play store(Opens in a new window).

Once you download the latest version of the app, you'll have to register your phone number. Then you'll receive an SMS message with a verification code. From there, you'll have a Signal contact list that will show you all of the contacts saved in your phone that are on Signal. You can securely text, voice, and video chat any of them, and you can manually add phone numbers of people not saved in your contacts, too. Voila, you're Signaling!

Related Video: How to permanently delete your social media

This story was originally published in November 2020 and updated in July 2022.

Rachel Kraus is a Mashable Tech Reporter specializing in health and wellness. She is an LA native, NYU j-school graduate, and writes cultural commentary across the internetz.

What is Signal? The basics of the most secure messaging app. (3)

Christianna Silva

Senior Culture Reporter

Christianna Silva is a Senior Culture Reporter at Mashable. They write about tech and digital culture, with a focus on Facebook and Instagram. Before joining Mashable, they worked as an editor at NPR and MTV News, a reporter at Teen Vogue and VICE News, and as a stablehand at a mini-horse farm. You can follow them on Twitter @christianna_j(Opens in a new window).

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