Gmail unveils end-to-end encrypted messages. Only thing is: It’s not true E2EE.

May Be Interested In:Danny Care: Former England scrum-half to retire from rugby union at end of the season



“The idea is that no matter what, at no time and in no way does Gmail ever have the real key. Never,” Julien Duplant, a Google Workspace product manager, told Ars. “And we never have the decrypted content. It’s only happening on that user’s device.”

Now, as to whether this constitutes true E2EE, it likely doesn’t, at least under stricter definitions that are commonly used. To purists, E2EE means that only the sender and the recipient have the means necessary to encrypt and decrypt the message. That’s not the case here, since the people inside Bob’s organization who deployed and manage the KACL have true custody of the key.

In other words, the actual encryption and decryption process occurs on the end-user devices, not on the organization’s server or anywhere else in between. That’s the part that Google says is E2EE. The keys, however, are managed by Bob’s organization. Admins with full access can snoop on the communications at any time.

The mechanism making all of this possible is what Google calls CSE, short for client-side encryption. It provides a simple programming interface that streamlines the process. Until now, CSE worked only with S/MIME. What’s new here is a mechanism for securely sharing a symmetric key between Bob’s organization and Alice or anyone else Bob wants to email.

The new feature is of potential value to organizations that must comply with onerous regulations mandating end-to-end encryption. It most definitely isn’t suitable for consumers or anyone who wants sole control over the messages they send. Privacy advocates, take note.

share Share facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Similar Content

Nicky Katt,  Actor in ‘Boston Public,’ ‘Dazed and Confused,’ Dies at 54
Nicky Katt, Actor in ‘Boston Public,’ ‘Dazed and Confused,’ Dies at 54
Download app from appStore
Life’s building blocks discovered in asteroid dust
Senators’ Brady Tkachuk
garrioch game | Ottawa Citizen
Spatial transcriptomic imaging of an intact organism using volumetric DNA microscopy - Nature Biotechnology
Spatial transcriptomic imaging of an intact organism using volumetric DNA microscopy – Nature Biotechnology
Access and affordability top Americans
Americans’ big health care concerns? Affordability and access, says Gallup
President-elect Trump selects Jared Isaacman to lead NASA
After 11 Years Behind The Host Mic, Neal Conan Signs Off
Changing Perspectives: A New Take on Global Events | © 2025 | Daily News