Meta said today that the company plans to enable end-to-end encryption by default for Messenger by the end of this year. The tech giant is also expanding its test of end-to-end encryption features to “millions more people’s chats.”
The company has been building end-to-end encryption features in Messenger for years now. However, most of them have been optional or experimental. In 2016, Meta started rolling out end-to-end encryption protection through a “secret conversations” mode. In 2021, it introduced such an option for voice and video calls on the app. The company made a similar move to provide an end-to-end encryption option for group chats and calls in January 2022. In August 2022, Meta started testing end-to-end encryption for individual chats.
There is increasing pressure on Meta to enable end-to-end encryption so the company or others can’t access users’ chat messages. Protecting individual communications has become more important after a girl and her mother in Nebraska pleaded guilty to abortion charges in July after Meta handed over her DMs to cops. Last year, the police prosecuted the 17-year-old based on data about her direct messages from Messenger provided by Meta soon after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, a 1973 judgment to make abortion legal.
In a letter to the digital rights advocacy group Fight for the Future (via The Verge) this month, Meta’s deputy privacy officer Rob Sherman said that it will roll out end-to-end encryption to Instagram DMs after the Messenger rollout. He also mentioned that “the testing phase has ended up being longer than we anticipated” because of engineering challenges.
In a blog post, the company explained that there were significant challenges in building out encryption features for Messenger. The company had to shed the old server architecture and build a new way for people to manage their chat history through protections like a PIN.
Meta added that it had to rebuild over 100 features like showing link previews in conversations to accommodate end-to-end encryption. The company’s popular messaging app WhatsApp has had end-to-end encryption for years, and in recent years it has figured out a way to support multi devices for one account without breaking encryption. Meta said that the Messenger team is learning lessons from WhatsApp to implement end-to-end encryption.
After the incident, multiple organizations, including Amnesty International, Access Now, and Fight for the Future wrote a petition to Meta and other platforms to enable end-to-end encryption for private chats.
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Authorities around the world have been exploring rules that could put encryption in messaging apps at risk. While Meta has pushed back on these proposals through WhatsApp to support end-to-end encryption, it is yet to fully build out these protections for Messenger and Instagram DMs.