Tn0.putty P8DocsTechnology
Related
Breaking: Small Businesses Suffer from Financial Data Lag – Real-Time Insights Become a Survival ImperativeUbuntu 26.10 'Stonking Stingray' Set for October 15 Release: Canonical Unveils Development TimelineIran Conflict Exposes Fading Power of U.S. Sanctions, Analysts SayHow to Set Up and Use Astropad Workbench to Control AI Agents on Your Mac MiniHow to Leverage Thoughtworks’ 34th Technology Radar for Strategic Software DecisionsKubernetes v1.36 Introduces GA User Namespaces: A New Era of Container SecurityUncovering the Hidden Productivity Killers in Your IT Ecosystem: A Step-by-Step GuideBuilding AI Agents with Red Hat: A Developer's Step-by-Step Guide

Meta Scraps Instagram End-to-End Encryption, Cites Low User Adoption

Last updated: 2026-05-17 15:47:16 · Technology

Instagram Kills Opt-In Encrypted Messaging

Instagram has permanently removed its end-to-end encryption (E2EE) feature for direct messages, reversing a years‑long promise to bring the privacy protection to all users by default. The feature, which was hidden behind a four‑step opt‑in process, was used by so few people that Meta decided to abandon it entirely.

Meta Scraps Instagram End-to-End Encryption, Cites Low User Adoption
Source: www.eff.org

“Very few people were opting in to end‑to‑end encrypted messaging in DMs,” a Meta spokesperson told reporters. “For those who want encrypted chats, we recommend using WhatsApp.” Privacy advocates say the move shifts blame to users rather than fixing the product.

Background: A Promise Left Unfulfilled

In a 2023 announcement, Meta boasted that it had successfully rolled out E2EE to Messenger and teased that Instagram was next. The company’s own 2022 white paper stated: “We want people to have a trusted private space that’s safe and secure, which is why we’re taking our time to thoughtfully build and implement e2ee by default across Messenger and Instagram DMs.”

Yet Instagram never enabled encryption by default. Instead, users had to manually toggle it on through a multi‑step menu—a barrier that ensured almost no one used it. Meta now says the feature’s low adoption justified its removal.

What This Means for Instagram Users

The loss of E2EE means that any direct message sent on Instagram can be read by Meta, law enforcement, or anyone who gains access to the company’s servers. While WhatsApp remains fully encrypted, the company is effectively telling users to switch platforms if they want privacy.

Meta Scraps Instagram End-to-End Encryption, Cites Low User Adoption
Source: www.eff.org

The decision is especially frustrating given that other tech giants are moving in the opposite direction. Google and Apple are working together to bring end‑to‑end encryption to standard RCS messaging. Signal continues to simplify its encrypted app for the masses. “Meta abandoning this principle is disheartening,” said one privacy researcher. “Instead of blaming users, the company should start by enabling strong privacy features by default.”

Users hoping for future Instagram encryption should not hold their breath. Meta has explicitly stated it will not support or develop the feature further. The broken promise joins a list of undelivered commitments, including default E2EE for Facebook Messenger group chats.

The bigger lesson: Defaults matter. When privacy is optional and hidden, most people will never find it. Meta chose to scrap the feature rather than make it the default.