Texas AG sues Meta over WhatsApp encryption claims
Hızlı Bakış
- Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has filed a lawsuit against Meta, alleging the company falsely claimed WhatsApp messages are encrypted and inaccessible.
- The suit cites whistleblower accounts and media reports, claiming Meta misled consumers about privacy protections.
- Meta denies the allegations.
Yapay zekâ özeti
Neden Önemli?
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has filed a lawsuit against Meta, accusing the company of falsely claiming that WhatsApp messages are encrypted and inaccessible to third parties. The lawsuit argues that Meta's promotional materials claiming end-to-end encryption have misled millions of users into believing their communications are fully private.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has filed what he described as a “landmark” lawsuit against Meta, accusing the company of “falsely claiming” that WhatsApp messages are encrypted and inaccessible to third parties, including its own employees.
The messaging app, acquired by Meta in 2014, states on its website that “no one outside of the chat, not even WhatsApp, can read, listen to, or share what a user says.”
On Thursday, the Texas Attorney General’s office announced that Paxton had initiated legal proceedings against Meta, accusing the company of having “misled consumers regarding the strength and scope of its privacy protections” for WhatsApp.
The lawsuit argues that Meta’s promotional materials claiming that it uses end-to-end encryption “have led millions of users to believe their communications are fully private.”
The Texas Attorney General’s office, citing media reports and whistleblower accounts, argued that those claims were “blatantly inaccurate” and amounted to a “complete and total misrepresentation of Meta’s privacy policies.”
Commenting on the lawsuit, Meta spokesperson Andy Stone has vowed that the company would fight it and insisted that “WhatsApp cannot access people’s encrypted communications and any suggestion to the contrary is false.”
Pavel Durov, the founder of rival messaging app Telegram, wrote on X that “now we know what WhatsApp’s founder meant when he said he ‘sold his users’ privacy’.”
In a 2018 interview with Forbes, WhatsApp co-founder Brian Acton admitted: “I sold my users’ privacy to a larger benefit. I made a choice and a compromise,” referring to the sale of the messaging app to what was then known as Facebook for $22 billion four years prior.
Durov previously charged that “you’d have to be braindead to believe WhatsApp is secure in 2026,” claiming that the Telegram team had “found multiple attack vectors” in its encryption.
The entrepreneur’s comments came amid a major class-action lawsuit filed in a US district court by an international group of plaintiffs against Meta Platforms over WhatsApp’s default end-to-end encryption.
The plaintiffs, citing unspecified whistleblowers, alleged that Meta and WhatsApp “store, analyze, and can access virtually all of WhatsApp users’ purportedly ‘private’ communications.”
Around the same time, Bloomberg reported that the US federal authorities had for some time been investigating similar allegations.
Bundan Sonra Ne Olabilir?
Yapay zekâ öngörüsü — kesinlik taşımaz
Meta will vigorously defend itself against the lawsuit, likely arguing that its encryption protocols are secure and that any claims to the contrary are false.
Çok muhtemel · Aylar içinde
The lawsuit could lead to increased scrutiny of Meta's privacy practices by regulators and consumers globally.
Muhtemel · Aylar içinde
Further details about alleged vulnerabilities in WhatsApp's encryption may emerge from ongoing investigations and the class-action lawsuit.
Olası · Aylar içinde
Açık Sorular
- What specific evidence do whistleblowers and media reports cite regarding Meta's alleged access to WhatsApp messages?
- What are the potential penalties for Meta if found guilty in this lawsuit?
- Will other states or federal authorities launch similar investigations or lawsuits against Meta regarding WhatsApp's privacy policies?
- What is the specific nature of the 'attack vectors' Pavel Durov claims exist in WhatsApp's encryption?





