Meta begins end-to-end encryption rollout

Meta begins end-to-end encryption rollout

All chats on Facebook and Messenger will now be automatically encrypted (Nick Ansell/PA)

Meta has begun its rollout of automatic encryption of all Facebook and Messenger chats, the company has announced.

Messages and calls protected by end-to-end-encryption (E2EE), which has been an option since 2016, can be read only by the sender and recipient.

Under the changes, Meta will no longer have access to the contents of what users send or receive, unless one user in a chat chooses to report a message to the company.

The new features will be available immediately but the company said it would take some time for end-to-end encryption to be rolled out to the more than one billion users on the platform.

Users will receive a prompt to set up a recovery method to restore their messages once the transition is completed.

However, critics have claimed the rollout will make it harder to detect child sexual abuse on the platform.

Loredana Crisan, head of Messenger, wrote in a post announcing the change: “The extra layer of security provided by end-to-end encryption means that the content of your messages and calls with friends and family are protected from the moment they leave your device to the moment they reach the receiver’s device.

This means that nobody, including Meta, can see what’s sent or said, unless you choose to report a message to us.”

She added: “This is the biggest set of improvements to Messenger since it was first launched in 2011.

“I’m proud of what Messenger has become: a fast and reliable service, with enjoyable features and strong safety tools, and now with the added privacy and security of end-to-end encryption.”

Apps including iMessage, Signal and WhatsApp all already protect the privacy of messages with E2EE.

Meta said it had worked with outside experts, academics, advocates and governments to identify risks to “ensure that privacy and safety go hand-in-hand”.

It said: “When E2EE is default, we will also use a variety of tools, including artificial intelligence, subject to applicable law, to proactively detect accounts engaged in malicious patterns of behaviour instead of scanning private messages.”

The firm also announced that it would add a number of new features, including the ability to edit messages for up to 15 minutes after they have been sent.

It will also give users the ability to control if people who send messages receive “read receipts” telling them a message has been read.

More in this section

The Business Hub

Newsletter

News and analysis on business, money and jobs from Munster and beyond by our expert team of business writers.

Cookie Policy Privacy Policy Brand Safety FAQ Help Contact Us Terms and Conditions

© Examiner Echo Group Limited