Run by a nonprofit foundation rather than an advertising company, Signal exists for one purpose: private communication. The protocol it pioneered is so well regarded that WhatsApp and others license it for their own encryption, but Signal goes further than any of them, minimising what its own servers can learn about you. There are no ads, no trackers, and no business model that depends on your data.
Everything is end-to-end encrypted with no opt-out: messages, calls, group chats, attachments, even stickers and typing indicators. A feature called sealed sender hides who sent a message from Signal's own infrastructure, and past subpoena responses have shown the company can hand over little more than an account's creation date and last connection time. The cost of all this discipline is a smaller network and a leaner feature set than the mainstream giants offer.
Conversations that genuinely need to stay private
Journalists, lawyers, activists, and anyone discussing sensitive matters default to Signal for a reason: even a full compromise of its servers would expose almost nothing. Disappearing messages and view-once media reduce what lingers on devices too.
A family or friend group that opts out of Big Tech
Signal covers the everyday basics well: group chats, voice and video calls, voice notes, reactions, and photo sharing. Convincing your circle to move is the hard part; once they have, day-to-day use feels familiar.
Replacing SMS conversations, one contact at a time
Signal registers with your phone number, so contacts who already use it appear automatically. Many people keep it alongside a mainstream messenger, routing their most personal conversations through it while the noisy group chats stay elsewhere.
Encryption with no off switch
The Signal protocol protects every chat and call, one-to-one or group, and there is no unencrypted mode to fall back into. Safety numbers let you verify a contact's identity in person for high-stakes use.
Sealed sender and minimal metadata
Sealed sender strips sender identity from message envelopes, so Signal's servers see a recipient but not who wrote to them. Contact discovery runs through private mechanisms designed to keep your address book unreadable to the service.
Usernames and phone-number privacy
You can now set a username and share that instead of your number, and a privacy setting hides your number from people who do not already have it. Registration itself, however, still requires a working phone number.
Calls, groups, and disappearing messages
Encrypted voice and video calls support group participants, and a default disappearing-message timer can apply to every new chat you start. Local-only backups and a desktop app round out the essentials.