Elon Musk is telling people WhatsApp can’t be trusted after an engineer at Twitter encountered the messaging service allegedly accessing his Android phone’s microphone while he slept.
Over the weekend, the director of engineering at Twitter, Foad Dabiri, tweeted(Opens in a new window) a screenshot of his Android phone flagging the microphone use from WhatsApp. “WhatsApp has been using the microphone in the background, while I was asleep and since I woke up at 6AM (and that's just a part of the timeline!) What's going on?” he wrote.
Dabiri appears to have discovered the issue through the privacy dashboard, available since Android 12, which can help you detect and restrict an app from accessing certain features on the hardware. Based on the screenshot, it looks like the dashboard caught WhatsApp repeatedly trying to access the phone's mic between 4 a.m. and 7 a.m. local time.
In response, Twitter owner Musk, wrote(Opens in a new window): “WhatsApp cannot be trusted,” which caused some users to reply back saying(Opens in a new window) they had deleted the app.
The microphone access is certainly raising eyebrows, especially since the messaging app is owned by Meta. However, WhatsApp says the controversy is a misunderstanding.
“We believe this is a bug on Android that mis-attributes information in their Privacy Dashboard and have asked Google to investigate and remediate,” WhatsApp said in its own tweet(Opens in a new window).
WhatsApp also points out that all voice calls, along with user messages, remain end-to-end encrypted on the platform. This means no one, not even WhatsApp itself, can decrypt voice call data, unless they obtain the user’s smartphone.
The chat app added: “Once granted permission, WhatsApp only
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