AI Summary:

Google Messages will support texting 911 via RCS starting this winter, offering features like location sharing and read receipts. This upgrade improves emergency texting which is already supported by over half of US dispatch centers. Google collaborates with RapidSOS for enhanced responder info. This announcement precedes Apple’s expected RCS support in iOS 18, aiming to broaden RCS adoption.

  • Skull giver@popplesburger.hilciferous.nl
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    23 days ago

    Do you have a source for that agreement? Sounds like an EU fine of billions just waiting to happen.

    Various carriers have had their own RCS apps for years, I doubt Google could’ve done anything about that. Of course you’ll need a carrier that supports RCS if you want to use non-Google RCS clients (unless you want to reverse engineer the protocol Google uses with their own servers) but RCS is a federated network between carriers (and, I guess, Google). Apps like Verizon Messaging use RCS and although Verizon is shutting down their app somewhere this month, I can’t find any indication that the has something to do with Google. I’ve certainly never heard of it and I can’t say I imagine this app being very successful.

    An early protocol implementation for RCS has been around for years but it seems to be abandoned. A newer stack has appeared on Github last year but it only implements USIM authentication, so must have system privileges. This is only one of the four authentication methods built into RCS(page 183) and carriers that use either digests or username+password combinations should be usable with such stacks with some small changes. One of those methods involves the carrier adding a header to your HTTP call and authenticating you completely transparently, even.

    The biggest problem with RCS isn’t Google gatekeeping it, but the general disinterested from the public combined with a very complex protocol that involves carriers and carrier support. Your carrier needs to set up and maintain a server and either they or someone else needs to make an app to use that server. As a result, Google is the only one that has actually bothered to set up both an app and maintained a service of their own, as carriers generally don’t like running extra servers almost nobody uses. I don’t know if Apple will use their own servers or if they’ll work through your carriers’ servers instead (like the protocol was designed to work) so perhaps there will be two non-carrier RCS networks out there soon.