
Facebook followed by adding it as an opt-in "Secret Conversations" feature in Facebook Messenger a few months later. Shortly thereafter, Google rolled out end-to-end encryption via the Signal protocol as an opt-in feature for its now-defunct Allo messenger and in its Duo video chat service. WhatsApp first adopted the Signal protocol in 2014 to end-to-end encrypt all messages between Android phones, in what Marlinspike told WIRED was "the largest deployment of end-to-end encryption ever." WhatsApp switched it on by default for all billion-plus users two years later. Signal, the app, has an unparalleled reputation for security and privacy, with high-profile endorsements from NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden and WhatsApp founder Brian Acton, who left WhatsApp in 2018 to serve as the Signal Foundation's executive director.īut the underlying crypto system that Marlinspike designed and on which Signal is built, known as the Signal protocol, has spread far beyond its eponymous app. You might already know Signal thanks to the popular end-to-end encrypted text messaging app by the same name, created by cypherpunk Moxie Marlinspike and in recent years hosted by the nonprofit Signal Foundation. As this protocol becomes the de facto standard for encrypted messaging in most major services, it's worth understanding what sets it apart from other forms of end-to-end encrypted messaging. It's also a win for one particular encryption system: the Signal protocol, which is well on its way to accounting for a majority of the world's real-time text conversations.

The news isn't just a win for global privacy.

That level of encryption, while limited to one-on-one conversations, is designed to prevent anyone else from eavesdropping-not phone carriers, not intelligence agencies, not a hacker who has taken over the local Wi-Fi router, not even Google itself will have the keys to decrypt and read those billions of messages. Last week, with little fanfare, Google announced a change that could soon make its 2 billion Android users worldwide far harder to surveil: The tech giant says it's rolling out a beta version of its Android messaging app that will now use end-to-end encryption by default.
