It is battle tested, standardized, widely used, have open source servers and apps, end-to-end encryption (OMEMO), self-hostable and are low on ressources and federated / decentralized.

I use it with family and friends. Conversations and blabber.im on android and Gajim on Linux. There’s also apps for windows and Apple.

Curious if anyone here use it and why, why not?

EDIT: Doh. In these Lemmy times I forgot federated. Added.

  • Matija Šuklje@toot.si
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    1 year ago

    @privsecfoss I would absolutely love to get back to #XMPP as my main (ideally only) IM, but in time some things made it hard to do so:

    - it’s extensible and not all clients support all modernly needed extensions - the #Jabber XEP solves this (on paper/standard level)
    - loads of spam - again, tackled by Jabber XEP bundle and clients that fully implement it
    - and ultimately, 90% of my contacts there never pop up anymore - network effect problem

    • MattJ@floss.social
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      1 year ago

      @hook
      Extensibility is not a reason not to use XMPP.

      It’s true, not all XMPP software supports every feature. However we didn’t all stop browsing the web because Internet Explorer 6 doesn’t support HTML5 🙂

      There is plenty of modern XMPP software to choose from, and if you don’t want to choose, Snikket is a great place to start (in my humble opinion - I work on that project).
      @privsecfoss