this post was submitted on 29 Nov 2023
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Two questions.

My family insist on using Whatsapp for the family chats. I have to keep a copy on a device just so I can communicate with them. I do so under protest, as I was always told it isn't secure. My brother has just said

"oh Whatsapp is encrypted, it's perfectly secure".

First, is it actually as encrypted and safe as my brother claims? That would solve everything.

Second, if it isn't, where can I get some proof that we should switch to Telegram or whatever? Proof which doesn't make me look like a raving loony?

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[–] [email protected] 102 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (8 children)

My understanding is that it IS encrypted, and its supposed to use the Signal protocol (Signal developed it and released it for others to use)

The problems are with

  • metadata (like the other comment explained)
  • closed source, so we take their word on it for how it works. It's possible they're being misleading or doing something shady

See this image from a few years ago:

Note that signal does require this, which isn't in the chart:

  • phone number (for now)
  • last active date
  • sign up date (I think)
[–] [email protected] 27 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

Oh also @[email protected]

Instead of Telegram, consider one of these, it's easier to switch to the good one now than to try and switch again later.

https://www.privacyguides.org/en/real-time-communication

Signal works great for my family

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[–] [email protected] 15 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Corporations love to lie with almost truths, or incomplete truths. So sure it might be end-to-end encrypted between two users, and each message is also signed with a special key that the corporation can view, or that some trusted third party carnivore system could view. That means they didn't lie, it is end to end encrypted, it's just three-way encrypted instead of two-way encrypted.

Or it is end-to-end encrypted across the network, but the edge devices, ie the phones, have search capabilities built into them to deliver the messages back to the organization based on some match capability.

And as other people indicated, closed source you don't know what's happening, you don't know what's changing, you just don't know

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[–] [email protected] 47 points 1 year ago (4 children)

Technically, yes, it is encrypted. However, Facebook still gets metadata on who you talk to, when you talk to them, how long you talk to them, your contact information, etc. As an example, if you talked to your girlfriend, then you talked to her doctor, and then you talked to your mom. There's a good chance that your girlfriend may be pregnant, even if I did not know what was said. Or, if I know you are at the top of a bridge and that you contacted a suicide hotline... So just because it is encrypted does not mean it is safe.

[–] [email protected] 27 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Also WhatsApp requests access to the phone book and is very hard to use if you deny access. This is very likely done because Facebook wants access to the stored numbers to build a social graph. Even if you personally don't mind, it is a gross privacy violation to share the phone number of other people with Facebook.

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[–] [email protected] 26 points 1 year ago (1 children)

That's clever about the pregnancy.

I would have thought it was about a case of herpes that you caught from your girlfriend and then gave to your mom.

[–] [email protected] 13 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

And that’s why privacy is important - the assumptions and decisions an algorithm makes are not necessarily correct, often not even close.

Edit:before someone wants to be smart: yes, I know it’s a joke.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

ml doesn’t understand jokes very well, so honestly it’s not a shit example lol

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[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago

Well said. I'm saving this comment in case I need to explain this to someone else.

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[–] [email protected] 41 points 1 year ago

No Telegram lol. Thats way worse. Whatsapp sais they are E2EE but its all "trust me bro" because you cannot look at the code.

With Telegram its a little pain to open encrypted chats and groups are always unencrypted. So its useless.

Let them try Signal, its nearly identical but you can trust it.

[–] FairLight 41 points 1 year ago (4 children)

Cybersec researcher here. The content of your chat is encrypted end to end. Their servers can't read what you write. This is because they use the same protocol as signal, x3dh and double ratchet. However, they can and will collect everything else. Contact info, for example, phone, etc

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago

Link previews however, are calculated server-side. So, yeah. They see any link posted.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago (2 children)

If you login to another device with WhatsApp, does it show your chat history? If so, then the servers have your key.

I've never used any FB service, so I don't know., and I don't know anyone who uses WhatsApp.

[–] redeven 8 points 1 year ago (2 children)

To "link" other devices you have to scan a qr from your phone, so it's certainly possible that during that process the devices connect and share the key, and the servers don't have it.

Or the servers could have it. Idk, it's closed source, that's the problem at hand.

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[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

Initially you could only log in from one device, as it created a new private key every time you switched device. Then they implemented Whatsapp Web, which essentially required the primary device to be connected to the internet, the chats would then be transferred from the primary device to the secondary devices (I assume through an encrypted tunnel of some sorts). Then as of late they have implemented a new technology that allows you to share your private key among multiple devices, making them all the "primary device". The chat history and all the messages can be shared from one device to another while encrypted. The weak spot at one point was the chat backup, which was unencrypted and stored in your Google Drive, so technically Google could have had access to all your chats. Today though, you can encrypt the backup through a password.

In theory Whatsapp has never needed to read your chats to have the functionality it has. That's in theory because it's closed source and we cannot know anything for certain. All this is just what Meta/Whatsapp said or pure speculation.

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[–] [email protected] 31 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

Switch to Telegram

You know it’s not even E2EE by default, and when it is it uses a homegrown algo that is not exactly well spoken of? (at least V1)

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

for clarity, i think that the worst thing anyone’s been able to decisively prove about telegrams encryption is that it’s vulnerable to replay attacks… which in the context of privacy rather than full security isn’t suuuuper problematic

that’s not to say that there aren’t other flaws; that’s kinda the point behind “rule number 1: DONT INVENT YOUR OWN CRYPTO”: you just don’t know what flaws there are… AES (etc) has had a LOT of eyes on it

but for the most part, the negativity with the crypto boils down to what-ifs

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (2 children)

IIRC Telegram is only e2e if you explicitly enable it, and not at all for group chats. My info is probably (and hopefully) outdated though.

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[–] JubilantJaguar 3 points 1 year ago (2 children)

As I see it, the key advantage of Telegram is not technical, it is political.

Yes, Telegram is a slightly shady company with an ambiguous business model and a possibly-dodgy encryption algorithm (when it is even turned on).

But Telegram is based outside the reach of the West (in UAE, eastern Europe, maybe even Russia). Whatever its other problems, nobody thinks that Telegram is under the thumb of Western governments, as the Big Tech corporate messengers almost certainly are.

Personally I don't care much if Russia or even China is spying on me. Because if we can be certain of anything in this world, it's that Russia and China are not sharing their spyware data with Western intelligence agencies. And as Westerners we live outside the reach of the Russian and Chinese police states, fortunately. So for us it's win-win for privacy. That's the way I see it.

The ideal solution, of course, is a truly private messenger which protects everyone's privacy, including Chinese and Russians.

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[–] [email protected] 26 points 1 year ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (4 children)
[–] [email protected] 12 points 1 year ago

i’ve seen the bullet points from that article riffed in different ways, but i think that’s the most important part:

  • They know you rang a phone sex line at 2:24 am and spoke for 18 minutes. But they don't know what you talked about.
  • They know you called the suicide prevention hotline from the Golden Gate Bridge. But the topic of the call remains a secret.
  • They know you got an email from an HIV testing service, then called your doctor, then visited an HIV support group website in the same hour. But they don't know what was in the email or what you talked about on the phone.
  • They know you received an email from a digital rights activist group with the subject line “Let’s Tell Congress: Stop SESTA/FOSTA” and then called your elected representative immediately after. But the content of those communications remains safe from government intrusion.
  • They know you called a gynecologist, spoke for a half hour, and then called the local abortion clinic’s number later that day.
[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I've wondered if they don't know the data. They can perfectly read the convo on your device, assign a category what you're talking about and keeping that category. They don't store, read, know the conversation, they only 'analyze' it. F.e. if you talk about planes they may assign a category travel and sell your profile to holiday companies?

I don't know about this, I'm just thinking that's how I'd do it if I ran an evil corp.

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[–] [email protected] 25 points 1 year ago (1 children)

When you type a message a message and send it to your counter part, WhatsApp says it encrypts it and the recipient will decrypt it on their side with WhatsApp. However, WhatsApp is closed source. That means you trust WhatsApp to do what it says.

It's like going to a contractor and telling them your message and handing them a key. The contractor says they'll deliver it to the other party in a manner that nobody else will be able to read that message. You can ask them provide the tools they do it, explain how they do it, and show you how it's done, but they say "no can do, trade secret". Do you trust them?

Alright, let's say you do trust them, they really do make the message unreadable to anybody but the other party. But every time you want to send a message, you have to go to their building, write down the message on a notepad, and then hand it + the key to the messenger. If you told them "Just to be sure, I'd like to verify that nobody else is here possibly looking at the message while I write, nor reading it when you go into the backroom to render it unreadable" and asked "Can I check for other people here?" to which they respond "no can do, trade secret". Do you trust them?

Alright alright, so you still trust them. They won't let you check anything, but you still trust them. The messenger is employed by the one and Sauron Inc. The owner has been caught lying about stuff before, but you trust them. No problem.

Let's says the messenger says "hey, you know, all the communications you have when you go into the small room there, we can make copies for you! if the messages were ever misplaced, this building burned down or anything, you could always have the communication history". You find it a great idea! Wow, it's so convenient. They even suggest to put copies in a building in another city and the building is owned by Darth Vader Inc. You're ecstatic! To get the process started, WhatsApp walks into your room with a bunch of blank papers and chest, then asks you to hand over your key and closes the door behind them. You are escorted out of the building and wait for the process to be over.

A few months later, the city is bombarded by Megatron. The WhatsApp building is destroyed and your communications are gone! The key you had for the messenger to render your communications unreadable? Gone too! Well, luckily you can just go to another WhatsApp building. You enter, say your name, fill in your details and you are escorted to a room that looks just like the one in the building the Megatron destroyed!
The elation is great! ... until you notice that all your messages are readable. Not only that, but the key that's used to make then unreadable by WhatsApp is sitting there on the desk - pristine and undamaged as it ever was.

Wait a moment... how did the unreadable messages and the key get restored? What exactly did Darth Vader Inc. get from WhatsApp?

Must just be a coincidence, right? You probably had the key in your pocked the whole time and gave it to WhatsApp while you were at the reception filling in your contact details. Your trust is unwavering, the security unrattled, and your communication unscathed.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 year ago (2 children)

You are right, we don't and can't know if any of what Meta says is true, but at least on the surface it seems to check out. If they are stealing your private key and unlocking all your chats in secret, then they are doing a bloody good job, since no one has leaked anything yet.

Just to clear things a bit, in your analogy you don't hand the courier both the chest and the key. The chest has a special keypad that accepts two keys, one is your key, the other is the recipient's key. What you do is you lock the chest with your key and then give it to the courier, which will deliver the chest to the other party, which will then open the chest with his key. In theory the courier never had access to the key.

Now the issues are that you are indeed writing your message from within the Whatsapp building and you can never know if there cameras watching you or not. You also cannot know if Whatsapp has made a copy of your key, or the recipient's key without your knowledge.

As for how can you recover all your chat history even after you destroy your phone, it's quite easy and Whatsapp doesn't need to know anything in particular. The functionality allows you to make a backup and store it on Google Drive. That backup gets encrypted with your password and it's probably the most secure thing of all, if nothing else because Meta would gain nothing from the backup having poor security (as it would already have all the data if they wanted it) while it would only make them loose face, plus would allow anyone else to gain access to all ~~your ~~their data. After you restore the backup on a new device a new key+padlock pair gets created and the lock gets shared to all your contacts (which will see the yellow box telling them your padlock has changed).

I'm not claiming it doesn't have privacy issues mind you, I'm just saying that you can't be sure either way, unfortunately. Still, better than Telegram that doesn't even encrypt most of your chats.

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[–] foyrkopp 22 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Whatsapp is encrypted. The problem is the Metadata they want - i.e. your whole address book.

I do not agree to Facebook having my phone number, but if you use WA and have my number, they have it, too - even if I don't use WA myself.

If you can convince your family to switch, use Signal or Matrix.

Otherwise, use Shelter on your phone with a limited, WA-ony address book.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

You can actually use it without giving it contacts permission, but you'll have to add people via short links, like wa.me/(number).

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[–] [email protected] 15 points 1 year ago

In a similar situation as you (entire society revolves around whatsapp). I came to this conclusion:

  1. Others won't share my view on personal privacy at all will happily give out any metadata or data. No matter what secure channel we use, the destination (people) will always leak.

  2. Because of (1), consider all communication with others as public, no matter the inferred intimacy, no matter the platform or its security.

  3. Consider (2) as true even if they somehow used Signal or any secure platform, because of (1). (E.g. "Hey, did you hear about $familyMember? Yes, the weird kiddo who forced me to use some strange blue shit for chat. He got positive on blood exam for $badCondition. Go check on him")

As for whatsapp itself, i use Android and isolate it in a separate profile, also frozen until opened. I also used a burner phone number for account registration, not my actual number.

People are more receptive of whatsapp accounts with "alternate" numbers when you explain you "got hacked in the past" or any plausible reason.

[–] [email protected] 14 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

I case they're set on WhatsApp:

You could use something like:

https://github.com/mautrix/whatsapp

and bridge WA to a secure Matrix server of your choice. That way you can have a secure environment and they can use whatever they like.

Here is an overview table about messengers, in case you want to compare them and have more arguments in the discussion:

https://www.messenger-matrix.de/messenger-matrix-en.html

I wouldn't consider WA secure. They do tracking, they have your phone numbers and those of all of your friends and know exactly who you talk to, when, and how often. Even if they don't know the content of the message because it's encrypted, that's a lot of information for the algorithm to feed on. Apart from that, I'm not sure if they have access to the encryption keys. They might be able to decrypt everything if they want.

I'm sure someone wrote a lengthy blog article about WA. But unless someone does a proper security audit including where the encryption keys are stored and the implications of that and how extra features like breaking encryption in case someone flags an inappropriate post turns out... The 'it's safe' is just a claim by your brother or Meta. You're free to believe in anything you want. But it's not necessarily true.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (4 children)

With the new European regulations Whatapp will soon be forced to offer some compatibility towards 3rd party apps, so there are chances that perhaps bridging in this way will become easier in the near future, or at least have some level of official support. But we won't know for certain how will it work until it happens. All we know is that Whatsapp is currently working on a way for 3rd parties to connect with them.

Personally, I'd hold for a bit to see where does that go and then decide what method to use.

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[–] [email protected] 13 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

To be frank with you, humans are the weakest security point in any system. Even if you did somehow (impossibly) 100% secure your device... you’re literally sending everything to X other family members who don't care about security anyway and take zero preventative measures. That's sort of the point of a chat app. All they would need to do is target your family instead of you to get the exact same info - this is how Facebook has everyone's telephone number and profile photo, even if they don't have an account. And if it's a WhatsApp data breach... well. Your family is just one in a sea of millions of potentially better/easier targets.

If there's anything interesting about your family chats that is actually secret info, it probably shouldn't be put into text anywhere except maybe a password manager. Just tell them not to send passwords or illegal stuff or security question info via whatsapp. It's all you can realistically do in situations like this.

We literally cannot keep all information private from everyone all the time, you have to pick and choose your battles. And even then, you'll still lose some, even if you're perfect.

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[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 year ago (1 children)

The contents of the chat messages are e2e encrypted, so meta can't see what you are sending.

But they can see all of the Meta data, ie how often you chat with someone, how often you send pictures/videos/voice messages, etc.

That is more than enough to know everything about you and your friends.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

The contents of the chat messages are e2e encrypted, so meta can’t see what you are sending.

Even if we assume correct e2ee is used (which we have no way of knowing), Meta can still see what you are sending and receiving, because they control the endpoints. It's their app, after all.

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[–] Anticorp 8 points 1 year ago (1 children)
  1. Meta claims it is e2e encrypted
  2. Meta claims they don't have the keys and don't scan the messages
  3. Meta doesn't need to scan the messages to get meaningful marketing data about users
  4. Meta are known liars who will do literally anything for money

Do with that information what you will

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Due to a lack of any reliable way of backing that up, I cannot convince anyone else using the opinions of a random on the internet. I was looking for a place I can show them with evidence, so I don't look like a conspiracy theorist with a pinboard full of string and coloured paper.

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[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago

You can for example have a look on the online resource below:

https://www.securemessagingapps.com/

It is very interesting with a big comparison grid between plenty of messaging solutions.

[–] KpntAutismus 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

louis rossmann talked about a case where the FBI wanted info on a user from signal, but all they had were the phone number and last time of connection.

facebook probably would have collected 100x that amount of data and would willingly give all of it up to the FBI.

use signal. it's even more feature-rich than whatsapp.

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