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ANDROID APP REVIEW

Silent Text: Basic Anonymity at a Hefty Price

Silent Text is available for free in the Google Play Store; monthly charges begin at US$9.95. The Tibetan government, law firms in Thailand and human rights groups in Sudan are all using a relatively new encrypted communications tool — one that fits easily, if not cheaply, onto your smartphone.

Silent Text app

Silent Circle is an encrypted voice, video, text and file-transfer protocol that’s available in app forms for Android devices, among others.

The voice or phone app uses the ZRTP key agreement protocol designed by the creator of PGP, or Pretty Good Privacy — a guy called Phil Zimmermann who is widely regarded as the father of encrypted communication tools.

What Is It?

Silent Text, the text app for Android that I’ve been looking at out of interest, uses a ZRTP-like proprietary instant messaging system over the Jabber XMPP instant message transport. Features include encrypted message attachments, a burn function with time delay that deletes the texts from sender and receiver devices, and encrypted geotagging for sharing locations.

A particularly powerful feature, technically, is that keys are located on the devices, within the apps, rather than on a server. That means that the potential for third-party interference is reduced. New encryption keys are generated for each conversation.

Maximum file size, however, is a weedy 100 MB.

There’s no charge for the app, which is available in the Google Play store, but monthly fees add up quickly.

Choosing a Package

On signing up, you get to choose your level of service. Silent Circle Mobile at $9.95 per month allows you to text any Silent Circle subscriber with the Silent Text app and make or receive voice and video calls to or from any Silent Circle subscriber with the Silent Phone app.

A desktop version of Silent Circle that includes voice and video functionality — but not text — is priced at $69.95 yearly.

Those basic packages don’t let you make and receive calls to or from any phone number in the U.S., Canada or Puerto Rico using the Silent Phone app or the Silent Phone desktop. To do that, you need to add a monthly $23.95 for Out-Circle Access as well.

I skipped the call-any-number option and bought the $9.95-a-month mobile package.

That’s where I ran into problems. Essentially, if you want to communicate with Silent Text and Silent Phone, you’ll need your buddies to be signed up too. I couldn’t find anyone to communicate with. Silent Circle reckons it has 17 of the Fortune 50 as customers, but I guess I just don’t know those folks.

A Neutral Platform

In any case, this app — along with Virtual Private Networks, or VPNs, that create tunnels through the Internet — are functional tools in certain environments, such as for avoiding corporate espionage; oppressive government regimes; situations where nosy private investigators are looking for dirt in non- no-fault divorce countries; developing countries where banking is performed via SMS; and regions where law-firm hacking is allowed.

You could probably add celebrity privacy to the list too. Silent Circle says 65 percent of its customer base is outside North America.

I’d also make the point that as electronic data becomes a free-for-all-for good and bad, basic anonymity in itself, for normals, is not something to be discounted.

More obviously, there are plenty of countries where insensitive conversations can get you in plenty of trouble, and this app may well assist in creating neutral platforms for free speech where the global oppressed can say and do what they want without fear of censorship.

They’d just better have a credit card to pay for it.

Want to Suggest an Android App for Review?

Is there an Android app you’d like to suggest for review? Something you think other Android users would love to know about? Something you find intriguing but aren’t sure it’s worth your time or money?

Please send your ideas to me, and I’ll consider them for a future Android app review.

Patrick Nelson has been a professional writer since 1992. He was editor and publisher of the music industry trade publication Producer Report and has written for a number of technology blogs. Nelson studied design at Hornsey Art School and wrote the cult-classic novel Sprawlism. His introduction to technology was as a nomadic talent scout in the eighties, where regular scrabbling around under hotel room beds was necessary to connect modems with alligator clips to hotel telephone wiring to get a fax out. He tasted down and dirty technology, and never looked back.

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