And if so, why exactly? It says it’s end-to-end encrypted. The metadata isn’t. But what is metadata and is it bad that it’s not? Are there any other problematic things?

I think I have a few answers for these questions, but I was wondering if anyone else has good answers/explanations/links to share where I can inform myself more.

  • American_Jesus
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    3
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    8 months ago

    That means if they want to see your messages they do it anytime, not only when someone report it.

    If a government want access to the messages they can access.

      • Lojcs
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        edit-2
        8 months ago

        Just want to note that the article you linked is referencing a guardian article that has a note from the editor titled “Flawed reporting about WhatsApp”. The thing they call a “backdoor” is the app reencrypting undelivered messages and resending them if the recipient’s keys change. This means if you don’t have internet or uninstall WhatsApp for a while, someone who clones your sim card and sets up WhatsApp with your number could read all the messages sent to you in the meantime. This in no way breaks encryption.

        One could argue that WhatsApp could spoof a key change in their servers and read the messages themselves, but if we’re not trusting WhatsApp on integrity to begin with it shouldn’t be what the server could do that worries us. In a closed source app they don’t need back doors for surveillance.