A U.S. federal investigation into WhatsApp encryption was shut down before reaching a conclusion — after an internal claim suggested Meta systems may access message content in ways that conflict with public descriptions.
In this episode of Cybersecurity Today, Jim Love breaks down what’s known, what isn’t, and why the story isn’t going away.
Also in this episode:
A newly disclosed Linux vulnerability (CVE-2026-31431) allows an unprivileged local attacker to gain root permissions — using a flaw that may have existed since 2017
BlueKit, a new phishing toolkit, shows how AI is now being built directly into cybercrime platforms
More than three million Alberta voter records exposed after being posted online — not by hacking, but by alleged misuse of legally distributed data
These stories highlight a growing pattern: the biggest risks aren’t always new attacks — they’re often hidden in how systems are designed, used, and trusted.
Chapters:
00:00 WhatsApp encryption investigation shut down
02:15 Linux “copy fail” root vulnerability explained
04:30 BlueKit AI phishing platform
06:30 Alberta voter data leak
Cybersecurity Today delivers clear, factual reporting on the stories that matter to IT professionals, business leaders, and anyone responsible for protecting data and systems.
