City
Epaper

Swiss army bans WhatsApp use over security concerns

By IANS | Updated: January 8, 2022 17:05 IST

London/New Delhi, Jan 8 Citing privacy concerns, the Swiss army has banned the use of Meta-owned WhatsApp among ...

Open in App

London/New Delhi, Jan 8 Citing privacy concerns, the Swiss army has banned the use of Meta-owned WhatsApp among other popular messaging services by army personnel.

The army staff has been asked to use encrypted Swiss messaging app 'Threema' instead, reports www.swissinfo.

Apart from WhatsApp, the Swiss army has also banned the use of Signal and Telegram.

According to reports, the primary concern appears to be the "ability of authorities in Washington to access data stored by companies that fall under US jurisdiction, as described in the US CLOUD Act".

"The CLOUD Act obliges service providers under US jurisdiction to comply with search warrants, regardless of where servers are located," according to reports.

Since Threema is based in Switzerland, it would not be obliged to respond to such search warrants.

Threema also operates in line with the European Union's GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation).

"Data security is one of the reasons for the policy changea, according to an army spokesman quoted in a report by Tamedia newspaper.

WhatsApp is the most popular messenger application among 16- to 64-year-olds in Switzerland, according to local surveys.

Such concerns over the use of foreign mobile applications by army officials have been raised in India too as they might compromise security.

After the Centre banned several Chinese mobile apps over security concerns in 2020, the Indian Army asked its personnel to delete 89 apps, including Facebook, PUBG, Zoom, Instagram, Snapchat and Tik Tok, etc, along with several dating apps.

The Indian Army has now launched a contemporary messaging application called 'ASIGMA' (Army Secure IndiGeneous Messaging Application).

The application can be used on mobile phones using the internal army network.

"The application is being deployed on the Army's internal network as a replacement for the Army Wide Area Network (AWAN) messaging application which has been in service for the past 15 years," according to the defence ministry.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: delhiusSignalEuropean Union
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalDelhi Shooting: Shop Owner Shot Dead Near Nizamuddin Markaz

Lifestyle5 Signs Someone You Love Might Be Quietly Struggling — From a Psychiatrist

NationalDelhi: 25-Year-Old Chartered Accountant Dies by Suicide After Inhaling Helium Gas, Body Found in Guesthouse

EntertainmentThree Minors Who Went Missing From Delhi to Meet Salman Khan Found Safe in Nashik After 4 Days

InternationalEarthquake in Russia: Quake of Magnitude 8.0 Strikes Kamchatka Peninsula; Tsunami Warning Issued

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyChatGPT may face capacity crunches ahead of GPT-5 launch: Sam Altman

TechnologyCentre-State partnership must to attract investment and industrialisation: Top official

TechnologyFPIs offload Rs 17,741 crore in July, trend may reverse after trade tensions wane

TechnologyTraders should wait and watch as derivatives data show indecisiveness

TechnologyForeign buying of S. Korean stocks hits 17-month high in July