Alert! Facebook reads and shares your private messages on WhatsApp – report

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ProPublica Report on Whatsapp: According to the report, Facebook has engaged more than 1000 contract employees across the world to read and monitor WhatsApp messages. However, the social media company has denied this many times.

california. Facebook’s encrypted messaging service WhatsApp is not as private as it claims. Shocking revelations have been made in a new report about this popular chatting app that boasts of its privacy features. It has been told in the report that Facebook used to pay thousands of its employees spread around the world to read confidential messages of users. The special thing is that WhatsApp always talks about the facility of encrypted messages. Not only this, it is also being said that the company has also allegedly shared the data with the legal agencies.

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A report was released by ProPublica on Tuesday. In which it is claimed that thousands of Facebook employees are reading messages that must be private or encrypted. Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg has repeatedly said that the company does not see WhatsApp messages. In the year 2018, he made a statement before the US Senate, ‘We do not see any content on WhatsApp.’

When a user creates an account on WhatsApp, he is told about privacy. “Those assurances are not true,” the report said. According to the report, ‘WhatsApp has more than a thousand contract workers, who check user content in office buildings in Austin, Texas, Dublin and Singapore.’ Facebook has also acknowledged that these employees keep scrutinizing the content for several days, on which objections have been raised or reported by the user or the company. The company has admitted that many times it involves possible terrorist conspiracies ranging from fraud and child porn.

The report revealed that when users press the ‘report’ button, moderators get access to the user’s personal content. In a conversation with ProPublica, unknown engineers and moderators of WhatsApp told that this gives the moderators five earlier messages, including a message raised objection. These can also include photos and videos. In addition to these messages, employees can also view the user’s WhatsApp group, profile picture, phone number, status message, phone battery level, language, and associated Facebook and Instagram accounts.

According to the New York Post report, every employee is faced with 600 complaints per day. In such a situation, they get less than a minute for each complaint. Now this allows reviewers to either do nothing, ‘track’ the user for further investigation, or ban the account. ProPublica says that WhatsApp shares metadata or un-encrypted records with legal agencies, which can give a lot of information about users’ online activities.

 

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