Meta Platforms has fulfilled a longstanding promise by introducing default end-to-end encryption for one-on-one conversations and calls on Facebook Messenger. The company asserts that with this encryption enabled, only the sender and recipient of a message can access its contents. Initially introduced as an opt-in feature in 2016, end-to-end encrypted texts and calls for individual discussions will now be the standard, marking a significant milestone after an extended development process.
Loredana Crisan, VP of Messenger, expressed, "This has taken years to deliver because we've taken our time to get this right." The team, including engineers, cryptographers, designers, policy experts, and product managers, worked diligently to rebuild Messenger features comprehensively.
Despite the encryption shift, Crisan assured users that popular Messenger features like themes and custom reactions would remain unaffected. However, she cautioned that the transition to default encryption might "take some time" for all Messenger chats.
While this move is a positive stride, The Verge notes that end-to-end encryption for group Messenger chats remains opt-in. Additionally, default encryption is yet to extend to Instagram messages, although Meta had previously indicated its implementation shortly after private Messenger chats.
In 2019, CEO Mark Zuckerberg outlined the company's intention to embrace encrypted ephemeral messages across its messaging apps. Zuckerberg wrote in a Facebook post, "I believe the future of communication will increasingly shift to private, encrypted services."
The implementation of default encryption implies that Meta won't have visibility into the contents of most Messenger chats, nor can it hand them over to law
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