Meta Denies It Can Access WhatsApp Chats Amid Lawsuit


An executive at Meta has denied accusations that it can access WhatsApp chats after plaintiffs filed a lawsuit against Meta on Friday, maintaining that the messaging app’s end-to-end encryption feature keeps messages secure as promised.

In an X post on Monday, Meta communications director Andy Stone said: “Any claim that people’s WhatsApp messages are not encrypted is categorically false and absurd,” while referring to the lawsuit as a “frivolous work of fiction.”

Source: Andy Stone

The lawsuit was filed in a US district court in San Francisco, California, on Friday by a group of WhatsApp users based in countries such as Australia, Mexico, South Africa and India.

The plaintiffs called Meta’s end-to-end encryption feature a sham and are seeking damages from the social media giant.

The lawsuit aims to “expose the fundamental privacy violations and fraud” that Meta is allegedly perpetrating on its users who use the messaging app on the belief that their communications are completely private.

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Pavel Durov, the CEO of WhatsApp rival Telegram, threw support behind the suit, stating: “You’d have to be braindead to believe WhatsApp is secure in 2026. When we analyzed how WhatsApp implemented its ‘encryption’, we found multiple attack vectors.” 

While Meta hasn’t issued a public statement, Meta states in its end-to-end encryption explainer page that the “End-to-end encryption helps protect your privacy by ensuring no one sees your messages except you.”