Why is Signal Threema and Briar superior to WhatsApp and Telegram?
The claim that Signal, Threema, and Briar are “superior” to WhatsApp and Telegram depends entirely on what specific metrics you value: maximum privacy and security, convenience and ecosystem integration, or feature breadth.
There is no single objective winner because these apps solve different problems. However, from the perspective of privacy engineering, threat models, and metadata protection, Signal, Threema, and Briar do have significant architectural advantages over WhatsApp and Telegram.
Here is a breakdown of why privacy advocates often rank them higher in terms of security, along with the trade-offs involved.
1. Metadata Protection (The Silent Killer)
The most critical difference lies not just in content encryption (which all major apps use to some degree), but in metadata (who you talk to, when, for how long, and your IP address).
- Signal: The gold standard for metadata minimization. It collects virtually nothing. If served a warrant, Signal can only confirm you created an account and the last time you connected; they cannot provide a list of contacts or message logs because they don’t store them. They use a “Sealed Sender” technology to hide even the sender’s identity from the server during transmission.
- Threema: Hosted in Switzerland (strong privacy laws) and fully anonymous. You do not need a phone number to sign up; you get a random ID. Like Signal, it stores minimal metadata.
- Briar: Operates on a completely different model. It uses Peer-to-Peer (P2P) synchronization via Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, or Tor. It has no central servers at all. This means there is no central point of failure and no metadata stored on a third-party server.
- WhatsApp: Owned by Meta (Facebook). While messages are end-to-end encrypted (E2EE) using the Signal protocol, WhatsApp collects massive amounts of metadata: who you contact, frequency, location data, device info, and social graph data. This metadata is used for advertising profiling and shared within the Meta family of companies.
- Telegram: By default, chats are not E2EE. They use client-server encryption, meaning Telegram holds the keys and can technically read your messages. Only “Secret Chats” are E2EE, and they must be manually enabled per chat. Telegram also keeps metadata on their servers and has been known to share phone numbers and contact lists with law enforcement under certain legal frameworks (though they state they require court orders).
2. Trust Model and Open Source
Security requires transparency. If you cannot verify the code, you cannot trust the claims.
- Signal, Threema, Briar, and Telegram Clients: All have open-source clients.
- Server-Side Code:
- Signal and Briar are fully open source (client and server). This allows independent auditors to verify that the software does exactly what it claims.
- Threema is open source on the client side, and their server-side code is partially audited and released to partners, though not fully public like Signal’s.
- WhatsApp and Telegram Servers: Both are closed source. We have to trust Meta and Telegram that their servers aren’t compromised or modified to snoop on users. We rely on third-party audits which are less frequent than with Signal.
3. Default Security Settings
- Signal: Everything is E2EE by default. There is no “normal chat” vs. “secret chat.” You don’t need to know how to configure settings to be secure.
- Briar: Secure by design due to its P2P nature. No cloud backup means no cloud-based attack vector.
- Threema: Strong defaults, but requires a paid license (unlike the others), which ensures they aren’t monetizing data.
- Telegram: Users must actively opt-in to “Secret Chats” for E2EE. Most users remain on cloud chats where Telegram holds the keys. Furthermore, group chats on Telegram are never E2EE.
- WhatsApp: Uses E2EE by default for messages, but the business model relies on metadata harvesting. Additionally, backup mechanisms (iCloud/Google Drive) are often not E2EE unless explicitly configured, creating a vulnerability.
4. Censorship Resistance and Accessibility
- Briar: Designed specifically for high-risk environments (activists in censorship-heavy regimes). Because it works offline via Bluetooth and doesn’t rely on the internet, it functions even if the ISP is shut down.
- Signal/Threema: Highly resistant to censorship, though they require an internet connection.
- WhatsApp/Telegram: While popular, they are frequent targets of government blocks. Because they rely on central servers, blocking a few IP addresses or domains can cut off access entirely. Telegram is sometimes blocked but often fights back with domain rotation.
Why WhatsApp and Telegram Are Still Popular (The Trade-off)
If Signal and Briar are so superior, why do billions use WhatsApp and Telegram?
- Network Effects: WhatsApp is the default in many countries. Being able to message a grandparent or a business contact who isn’t on Signal is a massive advantage.
- Features: Telegram offers unlimited cloud storage, massive group sizes (up to 200,000 members), channels, bots, and file sharing capabilities that outstrip Signal and Threema.
- Convenience: Cloud backups on WhatsApp/Telegram make switching phones seamless without losing history. Signal’s local-only backups are more secure but harder to manage for average users.
- Cost: WhatsApp and Telegram are free. Threema requires a one-time fee.
Summary Verdict
- Signal, Threema, and Briar are superior if your primary goal is anonymity, minimizing metadata collection, and resisting surveillance. They are the choice for journalists, activists, privacy enthusiasts, and anyone who believes “nothing to hide” is a fallacy regarding data accumulation.
- WhatsApp and Telegram are “superior” if your primary goal is convenience, feature richness, and reaching the maximum number of people. They offer good security for casual use against mass surveillance, but they fail when the threat model includes corporate data mining or sophisticated state-level adversaries looking for metadata patterns.
In short: Signal, Threema, and Briar prioritize privacy as a fundamental architecture; WhatsApp and Telegram prioritize connectivity and features, with privacy added as a secondary layer.