UPDATED 13:35 EDT / JULY 10 2013

Is Heml.is Really 100% Secure for Private Messaging? The Pirate Bay Co-founder’s Latest App Launch

If you’re still looking for a way to keep the NSA out of your personal life, the co-founder of The Pirate Bay may have just what you’ve been looking for.

Peter Sunde of The Pirate Bay has worked with developers such as Leif Högberg and Linus Olsson, to create a fully private messaging app that would be available to the two most popular mobile platforms to start – iOS and Android – but will probably support other platforms in the future.

Heml.is, derived from the Swedish word Hemlis (which means secret), is the chosen name for this private messaging app.  It fits nicely into what the app hopes to achieve – private messaging for people, no more worrying about the NSA snooping on your private talks with pals, colleagues, or whomever you wish to talk to in private.

The apps are not yet available for download, as Sunde and partners are still looking for backers.  Right now, Heml.is is a crowdfunding project and those interested in supporting the development of the app can fund either via PayPal or Bitcoin.

It aims to launch $100,000, and it now has $45,683 just after 23 hours of the project being launched.  Those interested can give donations amounting to $5 which will give you two codes to unlock all the features, $10 for 5 unlock codes and pre-register one username, $25 for 10 unlock codes and pre-register three usernames, $50 for same perks as the $25 donation and your name will be added in the app, $500 for your name in the app, 500 unlock codes and pre-register 10 usernames.  Or you can just choose the amount you want to give to the developers.

The app will be free to download when it launches but not all the features will be available for users, hence, the unlock codes.  The unlock codes and registering usernames are not yet available but will be given before the app launches.  Unlock codes can be given to friends so more people can enjoy the full experience offered by the app such as sending images.

So is the app truly 100% secure?

 

“Yes and no. Nothing is ever 100 percent secure. There will not be any way for someone without access to your phone to read anything, but with access to your phone they can of course read the messages. Just as they can use any other app you have installed,” Heml.is’ FAQ page stated.

That last paragraph makes you wonder as tho why you’d back something up when it’s not 100 percent spy-proof.  Also, the app’s page doesn’t really explain how everything will actually be made private.

Joining Winston Edmondson in this morning’s NewsDesk is SiliconANGLE Contributing Editor John Casaretto with his Breaking Analysis on this new private messaging app.

“There isn’t really a solid explanation of exactly how it all works yet.  It does have end-to-end encryption and if you’re into security stuff like I am, you’ll know that there’s a number of products out there that are similar to that,” Casaretto says.

“The key is to make this something that is consumable, easy to use so people will actually use it.  One of the things that I did notice was there was no mention of it being open source product thus far and that could lead to some trust issues and that’s an important distinction in that when you make it open source, it makes it easy for the community to review, to look at what the application is doing and  so there’s a number of questions there.  And also, it doesn’t really address anything as far as the metadata problem in that if some agency or some collection is going on,” Casaretto stated.

Casaretto mentioned that with all these spying, more spy-proofing measures could emerge from the open source community in the future.

For more of Casaretto’s Breaking Analysis, check out the NewsDesk video below:

photo credit: Nikhil Kirsh via photopin cc

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