I’ll cut straight to the chase: updating the Signal app annoys me and I’d like to know your best practices.
As far as I know, there are three ways of updating Signal:
- From the Play Store. This works quite reliably, yet comes at the cost of trusting and connecting to Google’s servers.
- Via the app’s built-in auto-updater that will, after a while, suggest an update through a notification. However, the frequency of these updates is really lackluster and thus unreliable, and there’s no way to trigger an update check manually.
- Via the APK on Signal’s website. In order for this to work, you need to have done the initial installation of the app from an APK already. Also, as far as I know, this version will not use GCM / Push notifications, but rather deliver notifications through a web socket, which is a huge drain on battery. Also, you’ll have to constantly check for updates yourself or rely on the (unreliable) self-updating mechanism (see 2).
- //Edit a fourth way might be to just update via Obtainium and pulling APKs off their Github. I’m not sure what that does to GCM/Websocket usage, see 3.
Let me know how you do it, and if there’s something I’ve overlooked.


I’ll reply to you since you first brought it up, but it’s a question to anyone here recommending Molly: what makes you cofident that Molly is secure (i.e. they’re not fucking up Signal’s cryptography by accident) and maintained by trustworthy people. Signal does get audits from time to time, Molly doesn’t.
Mind you, I’m not trying to shit all over Molly; Unified Push looks great. I’m trying to approach this with due caution though.
What makes you confident Signal is secure? It’s a centralised service, so there’s a single point of failure 🤷
Ignore the downvotes. That’s a fair question to ask, but one that does have answers. Signal is FOSS, has E2EE and was audited several times, so we know that
Thus, while mistakes do happen and can open up severe vulnerabilities, cf. Heartbleed, there’s reason to assume that Signal is relatively secure. Signal’s centralisation of server infrastructure is a valid concern, but not for security, but rather for