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As latest govt surveillance on Yahoo revealed, end-to-end encrypted Facebook Messenger chats now available to all

While some have questioned the need for strong encryption to protect simple chats between friends, the continuing revelations of mass surveillance by governments does make the issue a matter of principle for some. Just yesterday it was revealed that Yahoo likely allowed the government to scan all of its users’ emails. And, as I’ve argued before, we all have perfectly innocent things to hide.

Facebook began testing Secret Conversations – Facebook Messenger chats protected by end-to-end encryption – back in July, promising a wider rollout later in the year. The company has now told Wired that the rollout is complete, and that the feature is now available to all Facebook users …

A Facebook spokesperson tells WIRED the company just finished rolling out “Secret Conversations” to all 900 million Facebook Messenger users in the past few weeks. The opt-in feature allows users to encrypt their messages so that no one can read them except the two people on either end of a conversation—not even Facebook or law enforcement or intelligence agencies.

Unlike Apple’s iMessages and FaceTime, which employ end-to-end encryption automatically, you have to actively select the option in Facebook Messenger. When you tap the icon for a new message in the iOS app, you should see a ‘Secret’ label top-right. Tap that and then select the person you want to message.

There are, though, some limitations. First, it obviously only works if both parties have the latest version of the app.

Second, there is no cross-device support. The encryption is unique to each device, so you can’t start a Secret Conversation on one device and continue it on another. (Apple gets around this issue by sending separate copies of every message to each device, so although each device uses different encryption, the user can switch devices at will.)

Third, while images and stickers can be used in Secret Conversations, there’s no support for GIFs or videos.

Facebook added a Marketplace feature for local buying and selling earlier this week, after earlier adding support for CallKit on iOS 10, bringing VoIP calling to CarPlay.

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Avatar for Ben Lovejoy Ben Lovejoy

Ben Lovejoy is a British technology writer and EU Editor for 9to5Mac. He’s known for his op-eds and diary pieces, exploring his experience of Apple products over time, for a more rounded review. He also writes fiction, with two technothriller novels, a couple of SF shorts and a rom-com!


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