As we communicate more digitally, governments encroach more on our privacy. End-to-end encryption cannot be taken for granted.| WIRED
The agency cracked the Pensacola iPhones, but it still views Cupertino as a problem—even though it's easier to break into iPhones than it has been in years.| WIRED
Attorney general William Barr seems eager to reignite the encryption wars, starting with the social media giant.| WIRED
A sustained backlash against a new system to look for child sexual abuse materials on user devices has led the company to hit pause.| WIRED
With a new capability to search for illegal material not just in the cloud but on user devices, the company may have opened up a new front in the encryption wars.| WIRED
From Apple vs FBI to WhatsApp, it was a banner year for end-to-end encryption.| WIRED
A new independent assessment found that expanding end-to-end encryption protects a diverse range of human rights.| Meta Newsroom
The result is practically uncrackable encryption for hundreds of millions of phones and tablets that have Whatsapp installed---by some measures the world’s largest-ever implementation of this standard of encryption in a messaging service.| WIRED