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I just saw that Pavel Durov continues to question the actual security of WhatsApp. The founder of Telegram does not hold back when pointing out that the encryption promises of Meta's platform could be more smoke than reality.
What’s interesting is that Durov argues that WhatsApp might be accessing its users' messages, which directly contradicts what the company promotes about privacy. If this is true, we’re talking about a serious potential risk: that data could end up in third parties' hands without users knowing.
This criticism is not new, but Pavel Durov keeps it relevant because it touches on a sensitive point within the community of users who genuinely care about privacy. It’s a debate that constantly repeats itself on social media: how transparent are these apps really about how they handle our data?
What’s clear is that trust in messaging apps remains an important topic of conversation, especially when figures like Durov publicly question the security standards that others claim to uphold.