Apple, Facebook Apps Have Stronger Encryption Than Snapchat, Amnesty Says
Apple and Facebook provide strong encryption in their messaging and communications services, but Amnesty International said BlackBerry, Microsoft's Skype and Snapchat have weak privacy protection on their instant messaging services. Amnesty on Thursday issued rankings of 11 companies with the most popular messaging apps on their use of encryption to protect privacy. Sherif Elsayed-Ali, who heads the group's technology and human rights team, said "our communications are under constant threat from cybercriminals and spying by state authorities," with young people, who are the biggest users of such services, more at risk than others. Based on a scale of one to 100, Tencent scored zero in privacy protection, BlackBerry scored 20, Snapchat 26, and Skype 40. Facebook got a score of 73 for its Messenger and WhatsApp apps, and Apple scored 67 for iMessage and FaceTime apps. Amnesty said Snapchat, used by more than 100 million people daily, has a strong privacy policy commitment but doesn't provide end-to-end encryption, which, unlike Apple, few companies use. Amnesty said end-to-end encryption should be the default for all messaging apps. A Microsoft spokesman emailed that the company agreed with Amnesty about the importance of encryption but the group's report "does not accurately reflect" Skype's privacy and security protections. "Skype uses encryption and a range of other technical security measures, and we protect people’s privacy through legal challenges, advocacy, and strong policies to notify customers when we receive government requests for their data or detect attempted third party intrusions," he wrote. BlackBerry, Snapchat and Tencent didn't comment.