Facebook’s “Messenger” app provided with encrypted services
Facebook has started to introduce a setting to its “Messenger” app
that provides users with end-to-end encryption, meaning messages can
only be read on the device to which they were sent.
The encrypted feature is currently only available in a beta form
to a small number of users for testing, but it will become available to
all of its estimated 900-million users by late summer or in the fall,
the social media giant said.
The feature will be called “secret conversations”.
“That means the messages are intended just for you and the other
person – not anyone else, including us,” Facebook announced in a blog
post.
The feature will also allow users to set a timer, causing messages to expire after the allotted amount of time passes.
Facebook is the latest to join an ongoing trend of encryption among apps.
Back in April, Whatsapp, which is owned by Facebook and has more than
a billion users, strengthened encryption settings so that messages were
only visible on the sending and recipient devices.
The company says it is now using a powerful form of encryption to
protect the security of photos, videos, group chats and voice calls in
addition to the text messages sent by more than a billion users around
the globe.
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