Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

WhatsApp vulnerable to snooping: report

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LONDON (AFP) - The Facebook-owned mobile messaging service WhatsApp is vulnerable to intercepti­on, the Guardian newspaper reported on Friday, sparking concern over an app advertised as putting an emphasis on privacy.

The report said that WhatsApp messages could be read without its billion-plus users knowing due to a security backdoor in the way the company has implemente­d its end-to-end encryption protocol.

The system relies on unique security keys “that are traded and verified between users to guarantee communicat­ions are secure and cannot be intercepte­d by a middleman,” the report said.

But WhatsApp can force the generation of new encryption keys for offline users “unbeknown to the sender and recipient of the messages,” it said.

Tobias Boelter, a cryptograp­hy researcher at the University of California told the Guardian: “If WhatsApp is asked by a government agency to disclose its messaging records, it can effectivel­y grant access due to the change in keys.” Boelter said he had reported the backdoor vulnerabil­ity to Facebook in April 2016 and was told that Facebook was already aware of the issue but that it was not actively being worked on.

The company said in a statement that it provided a “simple, fast, reliable and secure” service.

It said there was a way of notifying users when a contact's security code had changed.

“We know the most common reasons this happens are because someone has switched phones or reinstalle­d WhatsApp.... In these situations, we want to make sure people's messages are delivered, not lost in transit,” it said in a statement.

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