Snapchat, Skype among apps not protecting users’ privacy
Friday 21 October 2016
Snapchat, Skype among apps not protecting users’ privacy
Facebook/WhatsApp, Apple
top privacy ranking of messaging apps
Only 3 of 11 tech
firms examined provide end-to-end encryption by default on
all their messaging apps.
Tech companies like Snapchat and Skype’s owner Microsoft are failing to adopt basic privacy protections on their instant messaging services, putting users’ human rights at risk, Amnesty International said today.
The organization’s new ‘Message Privacy Ranking’ assesses the 11 companies with the most popular messaging apps on the way they use encryption to protect users’ privacy and freedom of expression across their messaging apps.
“If you think instant messaging services are private, you are in for a big surprise.
The reality is that our communications are under constant threat from cybercriminals and spying by state authorities. Young people, the most prolific sharers of personal details and photos over apps like Snapchat, are especially at risk,” said Sherif Elsayed-Ali, Head of Amnesty International’s Technology and Human Rights Team.
Amnesty International has highlighted end-to end encryption, a way of scrambling data so that only the sender and recipient can see it, as a minimum requirement for technology companies to ensure that private information in messaging apps stays private. The companies that ranked lowest on the scorecard do not have adequate levels of encryption in place on their messaging apps.
“It is up to tech firms to respond to well-known threats to their users’ privacy and freedom of expression, yet many companies are falling at the first hurdle by failing to provide an adequate level of encryption. Millions of people are using messaging apps that deny them even the most basic privacy protection,” said Sherif Elsayed-Ali.
Amnesty International’s ‘Message Privacy Ranking’ ranks technology companies on a scale of one to 100 based on how well they do five things:
·
Recognize
online threats to their users’ privacy and
freedom of expression
· Apply
end-to-end
encryption as a default
· Make
users aware
of threats to their rights, and the level of encryption in
place
· Disclose
details of government
requests to the company for user data, and how they
respond
· Publish
technical details of their
encryption systems
Tencent, Blackberry and Snapchat score less than 30/100
Chinese firm
Tencent came bottom,
scoring
zero out of 100, ranked as the company taking
least action on messaging privacy, and the least
transparent. It was followed by
Blackberry
and
Snapchat scoring 20 and 26
respectively. Despite
Microsoft’s
strong policy commitment to human rights,
it is still using a weak form of encryption on Skype,
scoring 40 and leaving it four places from the bottom. None
of these companies provide end-to-end encryption of their
users’ communications.
Snapchat,
a US-based company
used by more than 100 million people every day, also scored
badly. Although it has a strong policy commitment towards
privacy, in practice it does not do enough to protect its
users’ privacy. It does not deploy end-to-end encryption,
for
example, and is not transparent in informing users
about the threats to their human rights or its use of
encryption.
Facebook, Apple lead the way
No company
provides watertight privacy, but
Facebook, whose apps
Facebook
Messenger and WhatsApp together have 2 billion
users, has the highest score with 73 out of 100. Facebook is
doing the most out of the 11 companies assessed to use
encryption to respond to human rights threats, and is most
transparent about the action it’s
taking.
However,
despite including end-to-end encryption as an option with
its new “secret
conversation” feature, Facebook
Messenger’s default mode uses a weaker form of encryption,
which means Facebook has access to all the data. WhatsApp
uses end-to-end encryption by default and notably provides
clear information to users about encryption within
the
app.
Apple
scored 67 out of 100, providing full
end-to-end encryption in all communications on its iMessage
and Facetime apps. But Apple needs to do more to make users
aware that SMS messages are less secure than iMessages. The
company should also adopt a more open encryption
protocol that allows for full independent
verification.
End-to-end encryption: a basic protection few firms provide
Instant messaging services like
WhatsApp, Skype and Viber are used by hundreds of
millions
of people every day. This includes human rights
activists, opposition politicians and journalists living in
countries where their work could put them in grave
danger.
With large data breaches occurring all too
frequently and governments’ mass surveillance
operations unabated, the strongest encryption as well as
transparency about who has access to message data, is key to
protecting them. Yet only three firms, Apple, Line and Viber
scored full marks for providing end-to-end encryption by
default on all their
messaging apps.
“Most
technology companies are simply not up to standard when it
comes to protecting
their users’ privacy. Activists
around the world rely on encryption to protect themselves
from spying by authorities, and it is unacceptable for
technology companies to expose them to danger by failing to
adequately respond to the human rights risks,” said
Sherif Elsayed-Ali.
“The future of privacy and free
speech online depends to a very large extent on whether
tech companies provide services that protect our
communications, or serve them up on a plate for prying
eyes.”
Amnesty International is calling on companies to apply end-to-end encryption to messaging apps as a default. This would help protect the rights of everyday people, as well as peaceful activists and persecuted minorities all over the world by enabling them to exercise their freedom of speech. It is also calling on technology companies to publish full details of the policies and practices they have in place to meet their responsibility to respect the rights to privacy and freedom of expression.
ends