The article text explicitly refutes the bullshit title. Governments can get access to metadata, not the contents of comms. They can demands whatever they want from Meta, but it appears that thethe only thing they are getting is the same metadata everyone has always known is not protected by E2E.
The article text explicitly refutes the bullshit title. Governments can get access to metadata, not the contents of comms. They can demands whatever they want from Meta, but it appears that thethe only thing they are getting is the same metadata everyone has always known is not protected by E2E.
Of course it has. Did you really believe Meta's promises on E2E encryption?
It is impossible for a closed source app to be safe.