Responding to a call that Facebook should do away with the encryption that prevents police from accessing WhatsApp data, the company's top executive has said such a move would make it difficult to track terrorists if government gets such access.
The call for ditching WhatsApp encryption emerged after five people were killed in an attack on 22 March in London, when Khalid Masood ploughed his car into crowds on the Westminster bridge and tried to storm the British Parliament. Masood is said to have used WhatsApp minutes before carrying out the attack.
Express.co.uk quoted Sheryl Sandberg, Chief Operating Officer, Facebook, as saying on Saturday:
She added:
Facebook also has 4,500 people who work to stop any attempt from extremists to hijack the site and the company plans to hire 3,000 more later in 2017. Sandberg said:
"We are working in collaboration with other tech companies now so if a video is uploaded to any of our platforms, we are able to fingerprint it for all the others so they can't move from platform to platform," she added.
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