The Sunday Telegraph

WhatsApp faces closure in Britain in row over encryption

Messaging service battles with ministers planning to grant police and MI5 the right to access content

- By Matthew Field

WHATSAPP has been threatened with a shutdown in Britain as ministers press ahead with plans to require easier access to messages for police and MI5, the messaging app has warned.

Will Cathcart, head of WhatsApp at Meta, which also owns Facebook and Instagram, told The Sunday Telegraph he was prepared to see the app blocked for British smartphone users rather than weaken its security.

The Online Safety Bill, which is currently making its way through Parliament, includes powers to enable law enforcemen­t to access encrypted messages on services such as WhatsApp.

Although WhatsApp has never proactivel­y withdrawn its service from a country, Mr Cathcart said the company would not weaken its security in response to a demand from Britain alone.

Mr Cathcart said: “The Bill provides for technology notices requiring communicat­ion providers to take away endto-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 100pc of our users lower their security.”

WhatsApp is used by 40m people in the UK and around two billion worldwide. Mark Zuckerberg acquired the app in 2014 for $19bn (£15bn).

End-to-end encryption means that nobody, not even law enforcemen­t or WhatsApp itself, can see the contents of its users’ private messages.

WhatsApp is banned in China, Syria and Qatar. In the United Arab Emirates, users are blocked from making video calls. Iran recently moved to ban it amid widespread anti-government protests, but WhatsApp insisted it would do everything in its “technical capacity” to continue accepting Iranian users.

Child safety campaigner­s have claimed this means child abusers can hide their deeds on secure messaging apps, while police services have argued it can hamper counter-terror investigat­ions. Meta, the owner of WhatsApp and Facebook, founded by Mark Zuckerberg, has faced criticism for its efforts to implement end-to-end encryption.

However, Mr Cathcart said the technology was critical to personal privacy in the age of the internet and similar to private conversati­ons in the home.

Mr Cathcart said: “So far it has just been authoritar­ian countries that have banned it. We feel the best trade off is to offer a secure service for all people that do have access to it.”

It is the strongest signal that WhatsApp would be willing to stop its app working in the UK, rather than bow to demands to change its encryption. Ministers will have the power to force internet providers to block apps from operating in the UK if they fail to obey the Online Safety Bill’s regulation­s.

Meta has previously followed through on threats to withdraw from markets. It blocked all news content from Facebook in Australia in protest of laws making it pay for news.

However, it returned within days after tweaks to legislatio­n and made substantia­l payments to publishers.

The Online Safety Bill was reintroduc­ed by Culture Secretary Michelle Donelan last week. The rules will give

regulators powers to impose billions of pounds in fines on tech giants. The row pits ministers against Silicon Valley. Last week, Apple said it would add additional encryption to its iCloud internet storage service for iPhones.

The Government has said the Online Safety Bill could, as a “last resort”, give telecoms regulator Ofcom the power to force private messaging apps to use “highly accurate technology to scan public and private channels for child sexual abuse material”.

A government spokesman said: “We support strong encryption but it cannot come at the expense of protecting children from exploitati­on. End-to-end encryption cannot be allowed to hamper efforts to catch perpetrato­rs of the most serious crimes.

“Ofcom will have a power under the Online Safety Bill to, where necessary and proportion­ate, direct platforms failing to tackle child sexual abuse to take action. We remain committed to continuing to work with the tech industry to develop innovative solutions that protect public safety and privacy.”

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