The last people who claimed android/iMessage unification were literally running a Mac mini server farm and mitm’ing their own users to give people the illusion of seamless interop. If you want that sort of thing, cool - you don’t, but sure, cool - maybe let somebody else be the crumple zone for whatever ridiculous sec-model chicanery these shops are selling before you give away your iCloud password.
Beeper is working with iMessage yet again, though Apple is likely to fight it

Co-founder denies Apple's claims of security and privacy concerns for its users.

Ars Technica
@mhoye it's already back. there's no chicanery at work here; their source is available.
@0xkruzr I really can’t believe that people are lining up to stand in the middle of a compatibility arms race with the biggest tech company in the world over colour of their text bubbles.
@mhoye @0xkruzr Any reasonable solution to the problem has the cryptographic endpoint on the Android user's device and the transport just routed thru whatever. If they're putting the cryptographic endpoint in their cloud shit, they're 100% scammers.
@dalias it is on the device, which I know bc I turned debugging messages on out of curiosity.
@mhoye
@dalias @mhoye @0xkruzr beeper is a company SaaSifying numerous open source projects. And for the claim of having an android version of iMessage, it’s maybe also just a repacked version of this? https://github.com/JJTech0130/pypush
GitHub - JJTech0130/pypush: Cross-platform iMessage POC

Cross-platform iMessage POC. Contribute to JJTech0130/pypush development by creating an account on GitHub.

GitHub
@charlotte @0xkruzr @mhoye From the README: "This project has been purchased by Beeper, please contact them with any questions about licensing."
@mhoye no one actually cares what color they are, they care that their messages get sent and received correctly -- functioning group membership, metadata like reactions, full-scale media.
@0xkruzr people care what colour they are a lot.

@mhoye @0xkruzr

Inferring meaning and social significance from an interface colour affordance, when there was none intended.

Humans being humans!