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EFF pressures Apple, Google, and Meta to expand end-to-end encryption with new ‘Encrypt It Already’ campaign

The Electronic Frontier Foundation has launched a new campaign calling on major technology companies, including Apple, Google, and Meta, to expand end-to-end encryption and make privacy-protective settings the default.

February 02, 2026 / 13:06 IST
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Encryption
Snapshot AI
  • EFF starts "Encrypt It Already" campaign, urging tech giants to boost encryption.
  • Campaign urges end-to-end encryption and privacy defaults for more services
  • EFF wants Apple to enable encrypted RCS messaging and better AI privacy controls

The Electronic Frontier Foundation has launched a new public campaign aimed squarely at some of the world’s largest technology companies, urging them to strengthen user privacy through broader use of end-to-end encryption and better default protections. Branded “Encrypt It Already,” the campaign argues that companies are moving too slowly on measures that are already technically feasible and increasingly necessary.

According to the EFF, end-to-end encryption remains the most effective way to ensure private conversations stay private. In its campaign messaging, the organisation says encryption not only protects user data from unauthorised access, but also puts meaningful control back in the hands of users. Despite this, the EFF believes many companies still treat encryption as optional or limited to a narrow set of products, rather than a baseline expectation.

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The campaign website explicitly calls out several high-profile companies, including Apple, Meta, Google, Bluesky, Telegram, and Ring. The EFF is asking these companies to either introduce end-to-end encryption where it is missing or expand it across more of their services. It is also pushing for privacy-protective settings to be enabled by default, rather than buried behind configuration menus that most users never touch.

In Apple’s case, the campaign highlights two specific demands. First, the EFF wants Apple to deliver on its promise of interoperable end-to-end encryption for RCS messaging. This would allow encrypted messaging between iPhone users and Android users using the RCS standard, rather than limiting strong encryption to iMessage conversations alone.