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Supreme Court to hear plea on banning WhatsApp for security reasons

New Delhi: Popular messaging app WhatsApp can soon be banned in India due to security issues. A petition was filed against the end-to-end encryption launched by the company recently. According to the petition the encryption

India TV Tech Desk Updated on: June 24, 2016 10:52 IST
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New Delhi: Popular messaging app WhatsApp can soon be banned in India due to security issues. A petition was filed against the end-to-end encryption launched by the company recently. According to the petition the encryption will give terrorists a means of communication that is impossible to intercept.

The Supreme Court will hear the petition next Wednesday seeking a ban on WhatsApp. It was filed by Sudhir Yadav, a Haryana-based right-to-information (RTI) activist, the petition also said that WhatsApp has from April started to enable its every message with 256-bit encryption that cannot be broken into.

"Even if WhatsApp was asked to break through an individual's message to hand over the data to the government, it too would fail as it does not have the decryption keys either," Yadav said in his petition.

Seeking a ban on WhatsApp in India, Yadav said any terrorist or criminal can safely chat on WhatsApp and make plans to harm the country and the Indian intelligence agencies would not be able to tap into their conversations to take necessary actions.

The petition said that in order to decrypt any message on WhatsApp, one would need a whopping 115,792,089,237,316,195,423,570,985,008,687,907,853,269,984,665,640,564,039,457,584,007,913,129,639,935 key combinations, which is almost impossible for even a super computer.

Decrypting a single 256-bit encrypted message would take hundreds of years, Yadav said.

Other messaging platforms such as Hike, Secure Chat, Viber and a few others are also using high encryption and constitute a threat to national security, the petition said.

Yadav, 27, told IANS that he had written letters to the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) and the Ministry of Communications and IT before filing the petition, but received no reply.

The apex court is now scheduled to hear his public interest litigation (PIL) petition on June 29.

(With IANS Inputs)

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