Skip to main content

Startup targets Hollywood with ‘secret messaging’ app

confide snapchat like messaging app targets hollywood following sony hack
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Executives at Sony Pictures must be feeling little nervous about what they put in their emails these days.

confide app
Click to enlarge Image used with permission by copyright holder

Following the recent and highly publicized hack where data including thousands of Sony emails was posted online – with some of the messages containing less-than-flattering comments about actors and others in the movie industry – the studio, and no doubt many other major companies across the U.S. and beyond, is now taking a close look at the security of its computer systems in a bid to stop a similar incident from happening again.

Clearly not one to miss a trick, a New York City-based startup this week published an LA Times ad (right) aimed directly at Hollywood for an app that lets users send private messages that self-destruct once they’ve been read.

A consumer version of Confide has been available for iOS and Android users since earlier this year, though recent events in Hollywood have given the startup the perfect opportunity to push a corporate version, which it says it’s been working on for a while and is due to be released soon.

The ad is an open letter to various Hollywood players – Sony among them – that have recently suffered at the hands of hackers.

How it works

Confide works much like a standard messaging app, with a few key differences. Fire off a message to one of your contacts and it’ll land on their device with the words blanked out. Run your finger over the blocks and the message is revealed one word at a time. Once you’ve finished reading it, it self-destructs, Snapchat-style.

After the message has been read, the sender receives a notification that the message has been viewed. The sender is also notified if the recipient takes a screenshot of it, but with only one word showing at a time, such images reveal next to nothing.

Confide for Business is an enhanced version of the original app, bringing with it extra features such as automatic integration with your company’s address book, and the ability to send PDF, Word, Powerpoint, and Excel documents , as well as images,  that are encrypted, ephemeral, and hard to capture via screenshot.

While some users concerned about privacy will likely be taking a closer look at what Confide and apps like it have to offer, the challenge facing startups is convincing people that their software is as safe as they say it is. After all, Snapchat was widely believed to be as secure and private as a one-on-one chat in a park until the Federal Trade Commission earlier this year found it to be misleading consumers on the matter, while several hacks related to the app have also dented confidence.

[Via: WSJ]

Editors' Recommendations

Topics
Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Learn 14 languages: Get $449 off a lifetime subscription to Babbel
A person using the Babbel app on their smartphone.

Learning a new language no longer requires you to make time for formal classes because there are now several language learning apps that you can tap. One of them is Babbel, and you can currently get a lifetime subscription to the online learning platform for only $150 from StackSocial. That's $449 off its original price of $599, but we don't know how much time is remaining before the offer expires. If you want to take advantage of the 74% discount, it's highly recommended that you complete the transaction immediately.

Why you should buy the Babbel lifetime subscription
A lifetime subscription to Babbel not only unlocks the possibility of learning one or two new languages, as the platform encompasses a total of 14 languages: English, French, Spanish, German, Italian, Portuguese, Swedish, Turkish, Dutch, Polish, Indonesia, Norwegian, Danish, and Russian. You'll be learning your new language of choice with lessons that only take 10 minutes to 15 minutes each to complete, so unlike classes with a rigid schedule, you can learn at your own pace and at any time you're free through Babbel. The lessons cover real-life topics, and they use speech recognition technology to help you master pronunciation. You'll then test yourself through personalized review sessions that will help make sure that you retain all the information that's being taught to you.

Read more
This one Apple Fitness feature completely changed how I exercise
Someone holding an iPhone with the Apple Fitness app open, showing the Custom Plans feature.

I have a confession to make: I'm not good at sticking to a workout routine. I love running, high-intensity interval training (HIIT), strength training, etc. In the moment of those exercises and in the post-workout euphoria, I feel amazing. But when it comes to waking up early in the morning to do these things before work? Well, that's where I really struggle.

This has been a problem for a while now. I go to bed with the goal of waking up early and going to the gym, but as I groggily open my eyes to snooze the alarm on my iPhone 15 Pro Max, I end up falling back asleep. And I've been repeating this over and over and over again.

Read more
You can pick up the Google Pixel 7 Pro for only $500 today
The Pixel 7 Pro with its display turned on, showing the home screen.

 

If you've been holding out on buying a new phone for a while because prices are still expensive, then you may want to consider going for one of the older flagship phones. For example, while the Pixel 8 Pro is out, the Pixel 7 Pro is still a powerful and viable alternative, and even better, it has quite a few great deals on it. In fact, you can buy a brand new and sealed Pixel 7 Pro from Woot for just $500, rather than the usual $1,100, and that's for the 512GB version of the phone, so you get a lot of storage with it as well.

Read more