In recent years, WhatsApp has become one of the most popular messaging apps in the world. End-to-end encryption is the process by which the service uses robust security for the protection of its users’ communications. The fact that messages are encrypted makes it very easy to ensure that they will remain private until they reach their intended destination from the moment they leave the smartphone of the sender.
The end-to-end encryption method works like this: it scrambles the content of communications into an unreadable form that cannot be decrypted. Before the message leaves the sender’s device, the message will be transformed into a complex code, thus protecting the sensitive data inside. It is critical to note that the key to this system is only possessed by the intended recipient’s device and therefore only he or she would be able to unlock and decrypt messages that come in this format.
Encryption with this digital key is considered to be particularly useful in combating the phenomenon of man-in-the-middle (MiTM) attacks. The man-in-the-middle attack refers to an action where a malicious actor intercepts a communication between two parties, possibly by listening in or even altering the content of the communication.
The letter appears as though somebody reads it secretly before it reaches the recipient and there is something about it that is suspicious.
With WhatsApp’s encryptio
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