Online privacy is a crucial part of our daily lives, mainly as governments worldwide develop more fantastic techniques to monitor the lives of their populations. The present famous free messaging application, WhatsApp, as of now has safety efforts like end-to-end encryption to hold communication protected from prying eyes.
With the guide of IP address transferring, the app’s developers are fostering a technique to build the security of calls on the platform significantly further, successfully redirecting calls to its servers for additional protection.
The WhatsApp beta for Android v2.23.18.15 that is presently being distributed through the Google Play Store contains this unfinished feature, according to the people at WABetaInfo.
Nevertheless, the part will probably turn out to be more normal before long. At the point when accessible, the new switch ought to appear when you go to WhatsApp’s Settings > Privacy > Calls, as displayed in the screen capture beneath.
Enabling it would “make it harder for people to infer your location,” according to the toggle, briefly explaining how WhatsApp would accomplish this. Additionally, the warning that having this additional layer of protection for your calls would lose call quality makes it probable that it will remain an opt-in feature that only a few people would be willing to use.
Since there is no indication that this only applies to voice or video calls, we assume this privacy protection covers both. In the meantime, WhatsApp’s support page clarifies that calls sent on the platform and texts or media “are secured from falling into the wrong hands” thanks to end-to-end encryption.
It’s good to hear that WhatsApp is looking at further ways to increase user security, especially in light of long-standing complaints that parent company Meta Platforms has neglected customer privacy.