In a significant shift to its privacy architecture, Meta has reportedly removed default end-to-end encryption (E2EE) from Instagram Direct Messages (DMs) globally. Moving back to “standard encryption” the protocol used by most traditional online services the change allows Meta to technically access the full content of user conversations, including images, videos, and voice notes.
This reversal has sparked immediate concern among privacy advocates, as it marks a departure from the company’s previous long-term commitment to securing user data against third-party and platform-level surveillance.
Privacy Trade-offs for Functionality
The transition means that while messages remain encrypted during transit to prevent external hacking, they are no longer “locked” in a way that only the sender and recipient hold the keys. Statistics from digital rights groups suggest that millions of users rely on E2EE for sensitive communication, from whistleblowers to everyday citizens.
A spokesperson for Meta stated that the move aims to “standardize the messaging experience across platforms” and improve the company’s ability to “combat harmful content and maintain safety standards.” However, critics argue that this provides a “backdoor” for data harvesting and government surveillance, effectively humanising the data as a corporate asset rather than a private right.
The Road Toward Centralisation
This development follows years of Meta promising to unify the infrastructure of WhatsApp, Messenger, and Instagram. While WhatsApp remains E2EE by default, the integration efforts have faced technical and regulatory hurdles. Historically, Meta faced immense pressure from law enforcement agencies globally to allow access to encrypted data for criminal investigations.
By reverting Instagram to standard encryption, Meta aligns the platform with the broader industry standard seen in services like Slack or standard email, but at the cost of the robust “privacy-first” reputation it had been attempting to build since the 2019 “privacy-focused vision” announced by Mark Zuckerberg.
The Logical Indian’s Perspective
At The Logical Indian, we believe that privacy is not a luxury, but a fundamental pillar of a dignified digital life. While the intent to curb harmful content is noble, sacrificing the sanctity of private conversations sets a worrying precedent. A society thrives when its citizens feel safe to communicate without the hovering presence of corporate or state observation.
We advocate for a world where technology serves humanity through empathy and trust, not through the erosion of personal boundaries. True safety should not come at the cost of our right to be heard only by those we choose.












