The
GSM
Association,
the
organization
that
develops
the
RCS
standard,
said
on
Tuesday
it’s
working
to
enable
end-to-end
encryption
(E2EE)
on
messages
sent
between
Android
and
iPhone.
E2EE
prevents
third
parties,
like
your
messaging
service
or
cell
carrier,
from
viewing
your
texts.
In
the
announcement,
GSMA
technical
director
Tom
Van
Pelt
said
the
next
milestone
for
RCS
Universal
Profile
is
the
“first
deployment
of
standardized,
interoperable messaging
encryption
between
different
computing
platforms.”
The
move
would
help
bridge
a
major
gap
in
interoperability
—
especially
now
that
Apple’s
on
board
with
RCS.
On
Monday,
Apple’s
iOS
18
update
replaced
SMS
with
RCS
messaging
for
texts
sent
to
users
on
Android.
While
the
change
doesn’t
get
rid
of
the
green
bubbles,
it
will
finally
allow
cross-platform
users
to
share
high-res
media,
as
well
as
see
read
receipts
and
typing
indicators.
But
Apple’s
implementation
of
RCS
is
missing
one
key
feature:
E2EE.
Currently,
not
all
RCS
providers
offer
E2EE.
Google
Messages
is
one
of
the
exceptions,
as
it
started
enabling
E2EE
by
default
for
RCS
conversations
last
year.
Apple’s
proprietary
iMessage
system
has
E2EE
enabled
as
well,
but
it
doesn’t
apply
the
same
protection
for
RCS
messages.
“We
believe
that
E2EE
is
a
critical
component
of
secure
messaging,
and
we
have
been
working
with
the
broader
ecosystem
to
bring
cross-platform
E2EE
to
RCS
chats
as
soon
as
possible,”
Elmar
Weber,
a
general
manager
at
Google,
said
on
LinkedIn.
“Google
is
committed
to
providing
a
secure
and
private
messaging
experience
for
users,
and
we
remain
dedicated
to
making
E2EE
standard
for
all
RCS
users
regardless
of
the
platform.”
As
an
Android
user,
I’m
just
happy
that
I’ll
finally
be
able
to
send
high-quality
photos
and
videos
to
my
iPhone-wielding
friends
and
family.
E2EE
would
just
be
an
added
plus.
(Originally posted by Emma Roth)
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