Privacy Suffers: Meta Ends Instagram End-To-End Encrypted DMs Worldwide

Meta Platforms has discontinued end-to-end encrypted direct messages on Instagram globally, marking a major reversal in the company’s earlier push toward privacy-focused messaging across its social media platforms.

The feature was officially withdrawn from May 8, 2026, ending Instagram’s optional encrypted messaging system that had allowed users to secure private conversations from third-party access, including access by the platform itself.

End-to-end encryption is considered one of the strongest forms of digital privacy protection because only the sender and recipient can view message content. Once the feature is removed, Meta will be able to access message data on Instagram where required, including text messages, images, voice notes and videos shared through direct messages.

Instagram users with existing encrypted chats are reportedly receiving in-app notifications advising them to download important conversations or media files before the feature is fully phased out.

The company will continue using standard encryption for Instagram messaging, which protects data while it travels between users and servers but still allows platform-level access to message content when necessary. Similar systems are widely used across conventional online communication services, including email platforms.

Once Central Focus, Disappears Now

Meta had previously promoted encrypted private messaging as a central part of its long-term strategy, particularly after expanding end-to-end encryption across Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp. However, encrypted messaging on Instagram remained optional and saw limited adoption among users.

According to reports, the company decided to discontinue the feature after internal assessments showed that only a small percentage of Instagram users actively enabled encrypted chats. Critics of the move argue that privacy features requiring manual activation often experience low usage rates because many users remain unaware of their availability.

Privacy vs Child Safety: Key Facts Behind The Encryption Debate

  • End-to-end encryption (E2EE) prevents platforms, hackers and even service providers from reading private messages, making it one of the strongest digital privacy protections available.
  • Child protection groups and law enforcement agencies argue that fully encrypted messaging systems can reduce the detection of child sexual abuse material (CSAM), online grooming and trafficking networks.
  • Internal Meta communications revealed during court proceedings showed company executives had previously warned that encryption could sharply reduce abuse reporting and detection capabilities.
  • Prosecutors in New Mexico claimed Meta’s encrypted systems reduced actionable child exploitation reports submitted to authorities and the US National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC).
  • The UK’s National Crime Agency earlier warned that widespread encryption on platforms such as Facebook and Instagram could result in the loss of up to 92% of child abuse leads.
  • Several governments are increasing pressure on tech companies to provide mechanisms for detecting illegal material even inside encrypted services, intensifying the global privacy-versus-safety debate.
  • The European Union’s controversial “Chat Control” proposals sought mandatory scanning of digital communications for CSAM, prompting strong backlash from privacy and civil liberties groups.
  • Britain’s Online Safety Act triggered warnings from Apple, Meta and cybersecurity experts, who argued that forcing platforms to weaken encryption could expose users to surveillance and cyber risks.
  • Privacy advocates argue that weakening encryption can expose journalists, activists, children and ordinary users to hacking, identity theft, government surveillance and cybercrime.
  • Critics of Meta’s Instagram decision say the company may have intentionally kept encrypted chats optional and difficult to discover, leading to low adoption before discontinuing the feature entirely.
  • Despite removing encryption from Instagram DMs, Meta has said WhatsApp will continue using default end-to-end encryption for messages and calls.
  • Technology companies worldwide are increasingly facing legal, political and financial pressure over child safety failures, online harms and platform accountability.

As the policy reversal has reignited debate over the balance between online privacy and digital safety, particularly regarding child protection and harmful online activity, several child safety organisations welcomed the decision, arguing that fully encrypted messaging systems can make it more difficult for authorities and platforms to detect child exploitation, abuse-related communication and other harmful activity online.

The issue has become a growing point of tension globally, with governments, regulators and technology companies increasingly divided over how to balance user privacy rights with public safety concerns.

Meta has not indicated whether it plans to introduce alternative privacy controls for Instagram messaging in the future.

President Mukherjee Launches ‘100 Million for 100 Million’ Campaign on Birthday

President of India Mr. Pranab Mukherjee marked his 81st birthday by launching a ‘100 Million for 100 Million’ Campaign organized by the Kailash Satyarthi Children’s Foundation at Rashtrapati Bhavan today (December 11, 2016).

Speaking on the occasion, the President said that he was delighted to launch the campaign led by Nobel peace prize winner, Shri Kailash Satyarthi, from Rashtrapati Bhavan, an institution which symbolises our Republic’s commitment to democracy, pluralism and secularism.

The President said that despite the progress the world has made in science and technology, economic development and in other fields of human endeavour, there are still over a 100 million children who are “out of school”. They are being denied their childhood and are facing exploitation in various ways. The world must realise without further delay that there can be no progress unless our children are safe, secure and unless they are provided the freedom and opportunity to become agents of change for the larger good of humanity. To ensure for them a bright, carefree and secure future, devoid of poverty, violence and want is our bounden duty.

The President said this global effort to mobilize 100 million youth for shaping a better future of 100 million children who are less privileged is the beginning of a change which was long overdue. It is only appropriate that this campaign begins from India, which has one of the largest populations of youth in the world. He expressed hope that the campaign, as it runs for five years, will have a path-breaking impact on the lives of children across the globe. He urged all children and young people from India and abroad to join this campaign and be the torchbearers for a vibrant, compassionate and happy world where every child is free from want, fear and exploitation.

The ‘100 Million for 100 Million’ Campaign aims to mobilise 100 million youth and children for 100 million underprivileged children across the world, to end child labour, child slavery, violence against children and promote the right of every child to be safe, free, and educated, over the next 5 years.

Earlier in the day, the President inaugurated twin tower apartments for staff of Rashtrapati Bhavan; Navachara-II, a hall for permanent exhibition of grassroots innovations at Rashtrapati Bhavan and a museum of vintage carpets & tapestries of Rashtrapati Bhavan.