Instagram Axes End-to-End Encryption for DMs, Betraying Privacy Vow
Instagram kills its opt-in end-to-end encryption for DMs, blaming low usage despite clunky activation. Meta breaks long-standing privacy promise.
Instagram has permanently removed its end-to-end encryption (E2EE) option for direct messages, abandoning a key privacy promise made years ago. The feature, which was opt-in and rarely used, is no longer available as of last week. This marks a major setback for secure communication on one of the world's largest social platforms.
Meta, Instagram's parent company, confirmed the move in a statement, saying, Very few people were opting in to end-to-end encrypted messaging in DMs.
The company blamed low adoption for the decision, but critics argue that the cumbersome four-step activation process was the real culprit.
Background
Meta had repeatedly pledged to bring default E2EE to Instagram and Messenger. In 2023, the company boasted about encrypting Messenger and teased that Instagram was next. A 2022 white paper stated: We want people to have a trusted private space that's safe and secure, which is why we’re taking our time to thoughtfully build and implement e2ee by default.

Yet Instagram's E2EE was never made default. Users had to manually enable it through an obscure menu. Predictably, adoption was minimal. Now Meta has fully withdrawn the option, directing users to WhatsApp for encrypted chats instead.
What This Means
This reversal erodes trust in Meta's commitment to privacy. Many users rely on Instagram for everyday conversations and won't switch to WhatsApp. The company is effectively telling users: Your privacy is not a priority here.

The move contrasts starkly with industry trends. Google and Apple recently collaborated to bring E2EE to RCS messaging. Signal continues to simplify its app for broader adoption. Meta, meanwhile, is backtracking on a fundamental privacy safeguard.
Meta's broken promise is especially disheartening because it was explicit—most tech companies let pledges fade quietly. Here, they ripped off the band-aid. But that honesty doesn't excuse the outcome: millions of Instagram users have lost a vital tool for private communication.
Ultimately, this decision sends a clear message: defaults matter. If Meta truly wanted secure communication, it would have made E2EE the standard—not a buried option. Instead, it chose to blame users for not jumping through hoops.
What can you do?
- Use WhatsApp or Signal for sensitive conversations.
- Demand Meta restore E2EE as a default feature.
- Support platforms that prioritize privacy from the start.
This is a wake-up call for anyone who assumed Instagram's promises would be kept. The age of broken privacy vows continues—but users can vote with their clicks.