Teams | Collaboration | Customer Service | Project Management

TI-Messenger goes live!

It’s a milestone week for Germany’s TI-Messenger initiative as public healthcare insurers go live with their TI-Messenger based solutions! TI-Messenger is one of the world's most ambitious and progressive communications initiatives. Its goal is to transition Germany’s healthcare system from paper and fax to real-time digital communication. This shift will significantly enhance productivity, improve patient outcomes, and safeguard sensitive health data in the digital era.

The importance of open standard federation for chat

Element will participate in the Building Sovereign Digital Workspace discussion track at UN Open Source Week. We’ve been invited to present a session titled: “The importance of open standard federation for chat.” A genuine open standard is the single most important part of ensuring digitally sovereign communications between multiple separate organisations.

Element powers T-Systems' TI-Messenger solution

Germany’s public healthcare insurers will go live with real time communications based on the TI-Messenger standard on 15 July. With that being just six weeks after TI-Summit, a conference all about the telematics infrastructure for Germany’s healthcare industry, it’s fair to say that TI-Messenger is the most popular chat at TI-Summit!

End-to-end encryption

End-to-end encryption (E2EE) is a foundational feature for secure digital communication, ensuring that servers can never see your conversation data - even if breached or legally forced. Unfortunately, it’s a term that has been repeatedly distorted - Microsoft Teams claims to be end-to-end encrypted when in practice support is partial at best. As more enterprise tools add E2EE to their feature list, it's important to unpack what that claim actually entails — and what it doesn't.

MAS migration unleashes Element X on Matrix.org

On Monday, Matrix.org (a free Matrix public server) started running Matrix Authentication Service (MAS), the next generation authentication system based on OAuth 2.0/OpenID Connect. This is a major leap forward for Element as it means that Element X users on Matrix.org can now finally benefit from all the security and usability benefits of next gen auth, paving the way for QR-code login, 2FA, MFA and more!

Introducing ESS TI-Messenger version 1.0

A major milestone for Matrix in German healthcare. We are thrilled to launch our first TI-Messenger compliant edition of Element Server Suite built specifically to suit gematik’s TI-Messenger solution for German healthcare. This edition marks a significant milestone in our advancements in compliance, scalability and usability for nation-scale Matrix deployments.

End-to-end encrypted voice and video for self-hosted community users

A key component of Element X, Element Web and Element Desktop is the voice and video capabilities made possible by Element Call using the MatrixRTC backend (including LiveKit). Element Call powers end-to-end encrypted (E2EE) in-app voice and video calling at scale for our flagship messaging apps. It delivers high fidelity video calls, emoji reactions, flawless conference calls and screensharing. Of course, it also works over federation.

How Element protects against Signalgate style accidental invites

In the wake of Signalgate, we’ve had many people ask us how an enterprise-grade deployment of Element ensures that only the right people are in the right conversations. It’s an interesting insight into just how pervasive the use of consumer messaging apps within governments (and workplaces) has become. Based on their experience of WhatsApp or Signal, people simply don’t expect a messaging app to have enterprise-grade guardrails.

US shows the risk of running a government by Signal

The Trump administration’s spectacular security breach, in which it seemingly shared details of a planned military strike in Yemen with a journalist, highlights just what can go wrong if you use consumer messaging apps to run your government. It’s beyond all reasonable logic that any government would use a consumer messaging app for even the most mundane chat. That it’s commonly used by the highest echelons of government on the most sensitive of topics is simply mind-boggling.