Apple Has Seemingly Found a Way to Block Android's New Imessage App
Arthur T Knackerbracket has processed the following story:
It appears that Beeper Mini, an easy iMessage solution for Android, was simply too good to be true - or a short-lived dream, at least. On Friday, less than a week after its launch, the app started experiencing technical issues when users were suddenly unable to send and receive blue bubble messages. The problems grew worse over the course of the day, with reports piling up on the Beeper subreddit. Several people at The Verge were unable to activate their Android phone numbers with Beeper Mini as of Friday afternoon, a clear indication that Apple has plugged up whatever holes allowed the app to operate to begin with.
Beeper Mini was the result of a comprehensive attempt to reverse engineer Apple's messaging protocol. A 16-year-old high school student managed to successfully pull it off, and for a while, everything worked without a hitch. That effort became the basis for the new app, which requires a $2 / month subscription. Here's what my colleague Jake wrote days ago:
Its developers figured out how to register a phone number with iMessage, send messages directly to Apple's servers, and have messages sent back to your phone natively inside the app. It was a tricky process that involved deconstructing Apple's messaging pipeline from start to finish. Beeper's team had to figure out where to send the messages, what the messages needed to look like, and how to pull them back down from the cloud. The hardest part, Migicovsky said, was cracking what is essentially Apple's padlock on the whole system: a check to see whether the connected device is a genuine Apple product.
Quinn Nelson, of Snazzy Labs, also made an excellent video that covers the technical details. The belief - or I suppose the hope - among Beeper's developers and users was that it would be such an ordeal for Apple to block the Android app that doing so wouldn't be worth the hassle. Apparently, it was easier than anyone expected.
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