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In this May 16, 2012, file photo, the Facebook logo is displayed on an iPad in Philadelphia.
Matt Rourke, Associated Press file
FILE – In this May 16, 2012, file photo, the Facebook logo is displayed on an iPad in Philadelphia. Facebook says it is tweaking the formulas that decide what users see in their news feeds to focus on friends and family, not news articles and other more impersonal material. Itap not the first such change the company has made over the years, and likely won’t be the last. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)
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Facebook is taking a big step toward keeping Messenger users’ conversations safe from prying eyes: The company is testing a new feature it calls “secret conversations,” which uses end-to-end encryption to lock up messages.

Using end-to-end encryption means that only the sender and recipient of a message will able to unlock and read it — even Facebook itself won’t be able to see what you’re talking about. In a blog post Friday announcing the test, Facebook highlighted sensitive topics such as health and financial information as among the reasons users might want to use it.

End-to-end encryption has seen a boom in popularity in recent years as mainstream tech companies have started integrating it into their products amid heightened cyber- security and surveillance fears. But that boom has also raised concerns from some law enforcement officials that it could stop them from being able to access the communications of criminals and terrorists even when investigators obtain a warrant.

The Messenger feature will not be turned on by default; users will have to choose to start a secret conversation. In addition to providing end-to-end protections, the feature will also allow users to set a time limit for how long each message will remain visible in a conversation. However, secret conversations currently don’t support some popular features, such as sharing GIFs or videos.

Only a limited number of Messenger users will be able to try out the feature for now, but Facebook says it plans to make it more widely available this summer.

Messenger’s secret conversations rely on technology from Open Whisper Systems, which also makes the free end-to-end encrypted messaging and voice call app Signal. Facebook used the same technology to build end-to-end encryption into Whats- App, which it owns, in a process completed this year. The company is following in the footsteps of Apple, whose iMessage system has protected users’ conversations with end-to-end encryption since 2011.

Matthew Green, a Johns Hopkins University computer science professor who consulted with Facebook on its plans to deploy end-to-end encryption in Messenger, says he’s increasingly seeing a sort of sea change in how developers view the technology.

“It’s becoming a minimal requirement for deploying an app like this,” Green said.

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