On 14/04/23 9:37 am, Yogesh Powar wrote:
Hi Praveen,

Great news about multi-state cooperative.

I have a couple of questions. I could have sent you a direct message, but similar questions might be relevant to others on the list.

Is money (a share price of 1000) the only criterion to become a member?

Every member has to abide by https://prav.app/coc and we are drafting the byelaws for the coop currently, they will have to follow the byelaws as well. Once we register, the new members will have to be approved by the elected board.

Have you explored Matrix (such as element.io <http://element.io> over XMPP) at all?

Yes.

Philosophically both matrix and XMPP are equivalent due to federation and interoperability. Due to some design choices, we prefer xmpp over matrix (semi-anonymous public groups as we want to use phone number as id, lighter groups due to groups on single servers though that loses some redundancy, etc).

See more such questions at https://prav.app/faq/

Matrix costs more in terms of system resources and effort to manage (we have experience of running poddery.com and diasp.in which has both matrix and xmpp). These extra costs do offer some benefits like redundancy of messages, but we feel that may not be required for a general messaging system. Though organizations that can afford to pay more may still find Matrix better.

Messages are stored on all participating servers in matrix, and they are stored forever by default, in contrast, xmpp groups are hosted on a single server and by default messages are deleted after some time (this can be configured by the admin). This also means matrix servers have to continuously merge the state and history across all participating servers (this can be thought of like a git repo being forked and merged all the time) and this takes a lot of cpu and ram.

Matrix do have better client apps compared to xmpp right now, but we feel this can be improved over time and the rough edges to xmpp clients can be fixed, especially since there is a lot of people coming back to xmpp. We also hope to invest in fixing some of these missing features in xmpp.

Thanks
Yogesh

On Wed, Apr 5, 2023 at 6:39 PM Pirate Praveen via plug-mail <plug-mail@plug.org.in <mailto:plug-mail@plug.org.in>> wrote:

    Hi,

    We specifically need your help to register a multi state cooperative
    society, which needs 50 members each from two states and we have 50+
    from Kerala and 26 from Maharashtra. If some of you joins and helps
    find some more members we can register this soon.
    Read more below
    Unpopular policies
    In January 2021, popular messaging app WhatsApp changed their privacy
    policy to combine all the data it gets with Facebook, giving users only
    two choices: accept the new privacy policy, or leave WhatsApp
    altogether.

    In a world where using WhatsApp has become a norm, that wasn’t really
    a choice.

    There were many users who did not like this new privacy policy. They
    tried to leave WhatsApp for other messaging apps, like Telegram and
    Signal. A sizable amount of users disagreed with the push by WhatsApp,
    but leaving a popular app like WhatsApp comes with its own
    costs—losing touch with contacts on WhatsApp. That meant, unless they
    were willing to be cut out from a lot of their contacts, people had to
    still leave one foot in the WhatsApp door.

    How different the situation is with phone numbers! If you had similar
    disagreements with a phone company A, you could have easily switch to
    any other phone company B and still be able to talk to other contacts
    by calls and SMS. Your contacts need not switch to company B to
    communicate with you. (In fact, the reason phone companies don’t make
    decisions like this is because they know customers will immediately
    leave them for a better provider. The ability for users to leave keeps
    phone companies under control).

    A solution: XMPP
    Imagine if all messaging apps were like phone and email, where users of
    any app can contact with users of other apps. In the above example,
    people would have a real choice to leave WhatsApp and just use any
    other service.

    This is exactly what we need.

    XMPP is a protocol that lets this happen. For the uninitiated, you can
    think of XMPP as a superpowered SMS, which works over the Internet and
    allows modern features like calls and image-sharing. It’s not a
    single company like WhatsApp but a standard that different companies
    can provide for.

    Messaging apps and services that that use XMPP can talk to each other.
    Examples of such apps are: Blabber, Snikket, Siskin, and more (think of
    these like Google SMS, Samsung SMS, Silence, and any other SMS app).
    Examples of XMPP service providers include disroot.org
    <http://disroot.org>, poddery.com <http://poddery.com>,
    monocles.de <http://monocles.de>, and a whole bunch more (think of
    these as different
    service providers, like BSNL, Vi, or Airtel).

    To drive home the point: any user registered on any XMPP service can
    talk to other users of any other XMPP service. (disroot.org
    <http://disroot.org> users and
    poddery.com <http://poddery.com> users can send each other messages,
    just like BSNL users
    can exchange SMSes and calls with people on Airtel). This gives users
    choice of service providers: a single company does not control
    everything, and we won’t be forced to accept arbitrary terms by
    services like WhatsApp to be in touch with others.

    Ease of adoption
    Unfortunately, the current onboarding process on most XMPP services is
    not user friendly at all compared to WhatsApp. This issue, combined
    with the lack of awareness about XMPP services among common people, has
    made mass adoption difficult.

    Things don’t have to be this way, and Quicksy is a leading example of
    this. Like WhatsApp, Quicksy allows users to register in a few taps by
    entering their phone number and receiving an OTP. But because it’s an
    XMPP service, Quicksy users can talk to users on other XMPP services.

    We are developing the Prav app to complement Quicksy by providing a
    compatible app (Prav users can talk with Quicksy users) and offering
    more choice to users. People can easily sign up for Prav in the same
    way they do for Quicksy, but now they have more than one alternative to
    choose from. Before, the choice only existed for people willing to
    figure out the complex setup process on other XMPP providers; with Prav
    they now have another easy-to-set-up alternative.

    Respects users’ freedom
    Our app is ‘free software’, which means users get freedom to run,
    study, modify, share and share the modified versions. When we say
    ‘free’, we mean ‘freedom’ and not ‘free-of-cost’. To avoid
    ambiguity of the word ‘free’, we also call it swatantra software.
    Examples of free software are VLC Media Player, Firefox, Debian,
    Quicksy, Prav etc. You can learn more about Free Software and why it is
    important here 1.

    This means that the original source code behind a swatantra app is
    freely available for anyone to inspect; people can conduct independent
    security audits instead of having to trust a company’s word about
    what data they are or are not collecting. Such an auditing can also
    verify whether the app sends messages in end-to-end encrypted form or
    not.

    In contrast, WhatsApp does not provide source code for their app and we
    can never verify independently whether the app encrypts messages as
    they claim.

    Running as a cooperative
    Choice aside, Quicksy is run by a single person, which has its own
    drawbacks—most significantly, having a single point of failure if
    something goes wrong. We want to offer Prav as a cooperative, adding
    more resilience by managing the service as a group, having a democratic
    decision making structure.

    In India, cooperative societies can be registered under state
    cooperative laws or under central laws. Only people from the same state
    can become members if we register under any state cooperative laws. So,
    we prefer registering as a Multi State Cooperative Society to allow
    people from different states to join as members. Members elect the
    leadership team of a cooperative for a specific term and there will be
    regular elections to elect the leadership team giving members
    democratic control over the cooperative.

    Every member will have one vote irrespective of the number of shares
    they hold in the cooperative, making it impossible for big companies to
    aquire the cooperative and take control of decisions. Acquisition by
    big companies is an issue as it can compromise the service: as an
    example, WhatsApp was an independent company, but it was eventually
    bought up by Facebook, which compromised the service in may ways, such
    as by weakening its privacy policy over the years.

    Next steps
    For this project to be successful, we need more people to join as
    members of the Multi State Cooperative Society. By law, we need at
    least 50 members each from two Indian states before we can do the
    registration.

    At the moment, we have 50+ members from Kerala, 26 members from
    Maharashtra, and a few from various other states. Details are at
    https://prav.app/become-a-member <https://prav.app/become-a-member> 2.

    By registering as a member of the Prav Multi State Cooperative Society,
    you can help us with your experience, knowledge and the amount that you
    give for buying shares will help us in funding for the app and running
    the service. Plus, your membership will help us cover the legal
    requirements for becoming a cooperative society.

    In case, we fail to reach 50 members from a second state by June 15
    this year, we plan to register as a cooperative in Kerala. This is an
    intermediate measure: we will still work to meet the necessary
    requirements in other states, and once that’s done, we will register
    as a Multi State Cooperative Society as originally planned.

    How you can help
    If we don’t get enough members by June 15th 2023, we will have to go
    through a two-step process to get members. To prevent this, we’re
    trying to onboard members as soon as possible—and we need your help!

    You can register as a member and spread the word to your friends to
    register as well, by visiting https://prav.app/become-a-member/
    <https://prav.app/become-a-member/>

    Read more
    https://azadmaidan.in/t/prav-app-reclaiming-choice-of-service-providers/83 
<https://azadmaidan.in/t/prav-app-reclaiming-choice-of-service-providers/83>


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--
Thank You

Yogesh Powar
https://yogeshpowar.github.io/blog/ <https://yogeshpowar.github.io/blog/>

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