Written by 8:33 am Entertainment, News, Social Media, Tech, Uncategorized, Web Views: 1

WhatsApp To UK Govt: You Can Ban Us But You’ll Never Have Access To Users’ Chats

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Instant Messaging App, WhatsApp has said that it would rather accept ban from Europe than allow the UK Government access to users’ chats.

WhatsApp said what the UK Government wants to do is to rubbish its two-factor authentication privacy measures that gives users trust on the platform.

The head of WhatsApp at Meta, Will Cathcart noted this as he said it would be better to have WhatsApp banned in Britain than make communications between users accessible to authorities.

His remarks came after the Online Safety Bill, which would force WhatsApp to compromise its end-to-end encryption, was reintroduced in the UK parliament last week following a five-month delay.

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End-to-end encryption makes it impossible for private messages to be read by third parties or WhatsApp itself.

Cathcart told The Telegraph on Saturday, that “the bill provides for technology notices requiring communication providers to take away end-to-end encryption – to break it.

“The hard reality is we offer a global product. It would be a very hard decision for us to make a change where 100% of our users lower their security,” Cathcart said.

He added saying the company would rather face the risk of being forced out than scale back its privacy protections.

We feel the best trade-off is to offer a secure service for all people that do have access to it – and to accept that in some countries we are banned.

The Online Safety Bill was first proposed by former Prime Minister Theresa May in 2019 and has undergone several changes.

The government maintains that the legislation is necessary to track down terrorists and child abusers.

In a statement to the British media, a government spokesperson said that “end-to-end encryption cannot be allowed to hamper efforts to catch perpetrators of the most serious crimes.”

According to the government’s website, “as a last resort,” the bill would allow telecommunications regulator Ofcom to force platforms to “use highly accurate technology to scan public and private channels for child sexual abuse material.”

WhatsApp is banned or restricted in China, North Korea, Iran, Syria, Qatar, and the UAE.

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