Finally, end-to-end encrypted text messaging between Android and iPhone users will be possible. End-to-end encrypted texting for talks between iPhone and Android users with the most recent software will begin to roll out in beta on Monday. End-to-end encrypted (e2ee) messaging is a critical privacy feature that makes users significantly less accessible to surveillance by hackers, governments, or the firms who make these communication platforms. It is nearly hard for anyone else to intercept and read these messages because they are encrypted during transmission between devices. Although iMessage has been encrypted since its inception in 2011 and Android users have been able to communicate among themselves using e2ee since 2021, texts exchanged between iPhone and Android devices have not yet been able to be end-to-end secured. Users of iOS and Android have had cumbersome communications over the years. Android users are unable to utilize Apple’s exclusive iMessage, and since 2020, Apple has refused to enable RCS messaging, a more advanced version of the decades-old SMS texting. Typing indications, read receipts, emoji reactions, larger message lengths, and encryption are just a few of the capabilities that RCS, the industry standard messaging protocol, adds to text communications. However, Apple did not endorse RCS until 2023, when it eventually gave in to pressure from regulators.







