The Asian Age

WhatsApp turning out to be a boon for criminals

- A bookie involved in digital betting racket said that all their work is now done through WhatsApp SAURABH TRIVEDI

To evade police surveillan­ce, WhatsApp calls have become the new tool for criminals, gamblers, and the prostituti­on industry in the city.

Interestin­gly, finding WhatsApp calls ‘safe,’ many police officials have also shifted to the calling feature of the app, fearing intercepti­on by other security agencies.

Kishlay Chaudhary, a cyber security expert, said that the end-to-end encryption feature of WhatsApp was intended as a way of ensuring that messages can only be read by the sender and their intended recipient. There is technicall­y no possibilit­y of someone tapping into the calls or texts, not even the

company itself. “Ethically, it is impossible to intercept WhatsApp calls. But recently, it has started providing IP addresses of callers that help security agencies to keep tab on suspicious activities,” said Mr Chaudhary.

“There are several other methods that include ground policing and cyber experts who help police to intercept criminals or any suspicious activities in the cyber world,” said Madhur Verma, deputy commission­er of police (Crime).

A police official deputed with the surveillan­ce department said that criminals have turned smart and make all their calls through various calling applicatio­ns to avoid any intercepti­on.

“Earlier, records of callers and receivers were easy to access by getting their call data record. However, in case of WhatsApp calls, there is no data or record of the caller or receiver or their conversati­on,” said a police official.

A bookie involved in digital betting racket said that all their work is done through WhatsApp. This is for safety as well because the police cannot track the communicat­ion.

On Tuesday, Delhi Police arrested a wanted gangster who had been evading them using WhatsApp.

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