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Facebook is poised to make some drastic changes to WhatsApp. The end-to-end encrypted app is comfortably the most popular messaging service on the planet with two billion monthly users
worldwide. But Facebook looks set to seriously shake things up by bringing Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp much, _much_ closer together. If you've got too many chat apps taking up
valuable screen real estate on your iPhone homescreen, this could be a good thing. After all, using WhatsApp to send texts to contacts who only use Facebook Messenger (or vice versa) means
you'll only need to keep one of the messaging apps on your smartphone at any one time. Aside from a small "From Facebook" logo at the bottom of the settings page, you'd
be forgiven for not knowing that WhatsApp is owned by Mark Zuckerberg's social networking behemoth. Instagram, which is also owned by the Californian company, advises people to switch
to the Facebook Messenger app for chats – despite having a built-in messaging function. And now, according to code buried in the software, Facebook has added a number of references to
WhatsApp messages within Facebook Messenger. READ MORE 3 AWESOME WHATSAPP FEATURES OUT NOW ...AND 3 UPDATES WE'RE STILL WAITING TO SEE The findings, which were unearthed by developer
@Alex193a and reported by WABetaInfo – a website that specialises in spoiling upcoming features by trawling through beta code, suggests Facebook wants to make it possible for Facebook
Messenger users communicate with WhatsApp users without switching apps. While that might sound simple – both messaging services are owned by the same billionaire and boast a very similar set
of features – bringing these apps together is likely to be anything but. WhatsApp uses end-to-end encryption to secure all communications, but Facebook Messenger does not. When sending a
text message from WhatsApp to Messenger – is your text secured against prying eyes? Or when they reply – does that chat become the only one within your WhatsApp app that isn't encrypted
end-to-end? These questions could seriously shape how Facebook approaches privacy and security going forward. MORE LIKE THIS SKY TV OFFERS SOME USERS A FREE UPGRADE ...AND A FREE SKY STORE
FILM FOR EVERYONE ELSE Although this is the first time developers have unearthed clues inside the code about WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger merging some features, Facebook has previously
confirmed plans to bring the apps together. Back in January 2019, Facebook confirmed plans to allow messages to travel between Instagram, Messenger and WhatsApp. All three messaging services
will remain standalone apps on smartphones, tablets and desktop. However, the underlying technology will be _much_ closer. At the time, Facebook said the merge would be a "long
process". Sharing core elements of the underlying technology could make it increasingly tough for regulators to break apart the different apps amid fears that Facebook has too much of a
presence in messaging services. New features could be rolled out across WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger and Instagram at the same time... with no need to use resources to receate the same
functionality for different services. For example, dark mode was available for Instagram users months before it was ready to roll-out to WhatsApp. Facebook could also share data across the
three platforms to help targeted advertising efforts. So, your conversations in Instagram could influence the adverts displayed within your Facebook Messenger app. Facebook had promised to
merge the underlying systems before the end of this year, so it's running behind schedule. However, the latest changes to the Messenger code prove that its goal hasn't changed.