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#India’s new idea for tracing WhatsApp messages is deeply flawed

#India’s new idea for tracing WhatsApp messages is deeply flawed

It’s no secret by now that India wants to trace the origin of messages on apps such as WhatsApp and Signal. In its new social media policing rule, the government said that while it doesn’t want to categorically break the encryption, it wants to know who generated a particular message first.

A report by the Economic Times yesterday suggested that some officials are proposing that WhatsApp should assign and store an alphanumeric hash to each message so as it could be traced back to the originator if it causes unlawful activity.

An official who is involved in the traceability discussion said that the government is “willing to work with WhatsApp to come up with a solution to enable traceability of messages without breaking encryption“.

However, there are a few problems with this approach. In an end-to-end encrypted system, every message is different for the system as it can’t read your messages. So if you send “Hi” two times, it doesn’t recognize it as the same message.

Prasanth Sugathan, Legal Director, Software Freedom Law Centre ( SFLC.in), a New Delhi based organization that concentrates on digital law, said that perpetrators could change the message slightly or simply copy it to cause the change of the hash:

The government is presuming that every forwarded message is forwarded as it is. Hashing is message-specific. Change a letter in a message and its hash will change. This means that if a malicious party wants to send a viral message, they would do it just by changing the hash of a message every time or after a few times it has been forwarded. Thereby, changing the first originator every time such a message has been forwarded. There is a high likelihood that this would lead to a very messy implementation.

In 2018, WhatsApp faced a lot of backlash from India after forwarded messages containing false information caused over 30 lynchings in the nation. However, the company has taken multiple steps to limit forwards, so it would be naive to assume every message moves in a chain.

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