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Messaging isnât broken because of encryption. Itâs broken because no one can prove whoâs on the other side.
Spam, scams, and impersonation because every âencryptedâ app still depends on centralized identity. Phone numbers, emails, usernames. The same systems that made spam a trillion-dollar industry now anchor your private chats.
A new wave of decentralized messengers wants to fix that. But itâs already fragmenting.
Right now, four different philosophies are battling to define âtrustâ in the next generation of messaging.
A serious effort is happening around DIDComm, a messaging protocol from the Decentralized Identity Foundation. Itâs not a chat app. Itâs a framework where messages carry cryptographic proof of identity, not a phone number or email.
DIDComm v2.1 formalizes this idea: secure, encrypted, and transport-agnostic messages exchanged between agents, within wallets, servers, or IoT devices, each anchored to a Decentralized Identifier (DID).
Itâs programmable trust. Machines and humans can exchange verified credentials in real time. A supplier can prove a shipment is certified. A user can verify a customer support agent without revealing their IDÂ card.
The downside: UX. DIDComm is infrastructure. Most people wonât see it; theyâll feel it⊠if developers get it right.
The second camp lives inside wallets. XMTP is doing great work here. Your crypto address doubles as a messaging endpoint. Coinbase Wallet now supports XMTP chats, pushing the idea of âwallet = identity = communication channel.â
Wallet-based messaging fits perfectly for Web3 commerce. You can receive DAO votes, marketplace updates, or direct messages tied to verified wallets. You know the sender because their address and on-chain record prove it.
Itâs not free from issues. Spam and Sybil attacks follow open systems. But the framework makes portable identity possible. You can leave one app and take your chat history and reputation with you.
Waku, Nostr, and SimpleX occupy the third camp: decentralized relays and gossip networks. These protocols trade convenience for censorship resistance.
Waku v2 is a cleaned-up successor to Whisper. It stores, forwards, and routes messages across peers with no servers, and no central discovery. Nostrâs new NIP-17 spec adds encrypted DMs to its social relay system. SimpleX leans even harder on privacy, routing messages through one-time relays and Tor channels.
Itâs the purest form of decentralization, and as such the hardest to scale. No account recovery, no global discovery, and little spam control. These networks will matter most where freedom matters most.
While the crypto world argues about decentralization, the telecom giants are quietly shipping end-to-end encryption to billions.
The Message Layer Security (MLS) protocol, an IETF standard, will soon power RCS, the default chat layer across Android and iOS. Apple finally joined Google and the GSMA alliance to support it.
This isnât decentralized, but itâs historic. MLS brings group E2EE to carrier messaging for the first time. Billions of phones will suddenly be encrypted by default.
What it doesnât solve: identity and portability. Your phone number remains your passport. You canât take your reputation with you when you switch apps.
Then thereâs X.
After killing off its previous encryption scheme, Elon Muskâs platform is rebuilding DMs as âXChat.â The marketing talks about âBitcoin-style encryption.â The code doesnât.
Itâs not decentralized. Itâs still a closed, centralized system with an uncertain cryptographic base. The value lies in the user base, not the trust model.
X proves a point: big platforms can bolt on crypto, but they canât decentralize identity. The DNA doesnât match.
Every messaging system now faces the same three questions:
Ontology has spent years building the rails for these questions.
Decentralized messaging isnât utopia.
Matrix, the biggest federated network, recently broke compatibility to fix protocol-level flaws. Privacy-first tools like SimpleX attract both activists and abuse. Wallet UX remains fragile.
Still, the direction is clear. The next messaging war wonât be fought over stickers or features. Itâll be fought over trust without dependency.
Encryption is table stakes.
Identity and reputation are the new moat.
The protocol that nails both, without locking you in, wins.
And when that happens, messaging stops being an app.
It becomes an ecosystem of verifiable relationships.
Thatâs the real revolution.
Decentralized Messaging Just Forked Four Ways was originally published in OntologyNetwork on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
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