WhatsApp’s CEO has stated that the company will not “lower the security” of its messenger service.
WhatsApp has announced that it will not fall to the UK government’s demand to undermine end-to-end encryption by adding a backdoor for law enforcement investigations.
The National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC) has slammed WhatsApp’s stance, claiming that direct messaging is “the front line” of child sexual exploitation. According to the government, digital companies must address child-abuse content on the internet. Its recommendations are included in the Online Safety Bill, which has been postponed until autumn.
The government’s measures to discover child sex-abuse photographs may entail analyzing private messages. As part of the Online Safety Bill, the British government suggested the potential of monitoring private messages (e.g. to access images of child sexual abuse or other crimes in this context). In general, the British government is eager to assist in developing programs that can detect photos while protecting the privacy of individuals.
Is it the end of end-to-end encryption?
End-to-end encryption (E2EE) offers the highest level of security since, by design, only the intended recipient has the key to decrypt the message, which is necessary for private communication.
The technological world is now confused by the UK government’s pledge to assist the development of systems that could detect illegal images within or surrounding an E2EE environment while maintaining user privacy.
Experts have questioned whether it is even feasible, with the majority concluding that client-side scanning is the only viable approach. However, this breaks the foundations of E2EE because messages are no longer private.
The UK and EU measures are similar to Apple’s initiative last year to scan photos on people’s iPhones for harmful content before uploading them to iCloud. However, after privacy advocates said the technology giant had built a security backdoor into its software, Apple withdrew the plans.
The Frontline
NSPCC head of child safety online policy, Andy Burrows, has called direct messaging “the front line” of child sexual abuse.
He mentioned that it’s becoming evident that children’s safety and adult privacy don’t have to be set against each other. NSPCC want to open the discussion about what a fair settlement may look like.