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What is end-to-end encryption? - MSN
End-to-end encryption (or E2EE) is a secure way of sending data that prevents third parties from being able to access your information when it’s being sent from one place to another.
Google is rolling out end-to-end encryption to Gmail, with a beta test available to Google Workspace users - what you need to know.
The use of encryption is as old as the internet itself, but there are two main issues that contribute to the limitation of using end-to-end encryption.
End-to-end encryption means that your conversations are encrypted from one device to another so the conversation can't be accessed by anyone other than the sender and the intended receiver.
Meta announced today that it has started gradually expanding testing default end-to-end encryption for Messenger.
Meta makes end-to-end encryption a default on Facebook Messenger, meaning no one other than the sender and the recipient can decipher people’s messages.
Enabling end-to-end encryption on group chats is a much trickier problem, so Google won’t commit to a timeline for extending the feature.
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