Joy Ann Reid is sounding an alarm about a privacy change set to hit Instagram on Friday.
The MSNBC host and political commentator shared a repost from activist account @nokings.usa on Instagram, then added her own blunt caption. “The billionaires are not your friends,” she wrote. She added, simply, that they’re watching.
The warning she amplified is direct. Starting May 8th, Instagram will no longer use end-to-end encryption for direct messages. Meta, the company that owns Instagram, has offered no public explanation for dropping the feature.
End-to-end encryption means only the sender and recipient can read a message. No one else can access the content – not the app, not the company, and not any outside party. Removing it means Instagram DMs become readable by Meta.
That’s what Reid zeroed in on. She didn’t dress it up. Billionaires aren’t your friends. They’re watching.
It’s a familiar angle for her. Reid has spent years at MSNBC as one of the network’s most prominent political voices. She makes it her business to track power, money, and the decisions made by the people who control both. She’s been skeptical of big tech’s motives before. Calling out a quiet privacy rollback fits her usual approach.
The original alert came from @nokings.usa, an account with a clear activist perspective. Reid shared it and added her own caption. That choice signals she agrees with the interpretation, not just the policy facts.
And those facts deserve attention on their own. Meta hasn’t announced this change publicly. There’s no blog post, no press release, and no statement to the press. Meta hasn’t explained why end-to-end encryption is disappearing from DMs. The feature just vanishes on Friday.
The silence is notable given the context. Meta has promoted end-to-end encryption features in recent years, pitching the security protections as a win for users. Quietly removing one of those protections now – with no explanation offered – reads very differently.
That unexplained rollback raises real questions. What does Meta plan to do with private messages it can now access? Could they feed into ad targeting? Could they help train AI systems? The company hasn’t answered any of those questions.
The timing doesn’t leave much room to react. Anyone using Instagram DMs for sensitive conversations – health questions, confidential work exchanges, personal matters – has until tomorrow. After Friday, the content of those messages is no longer between just two people.
Most users miss privacy changes like this one entirely. Reid’s post, backed by her platform at MSNBC, catches people before the deadline.
Meta has faced privacy scrutiny before. Congressional hearings, EU regulatory fines, high-profile data controversies – the company has navigated all of it. Most of those moments came with at least some form of official communication. An acknowledgment, a statement, some effort to get ahead of the story. This time, the only notice most users are getting comes from accounts like @nokings.usa and voices like Reid’s.
She kept the message simple. The billionaires own the platforms. The platforms are watching. And starting tomorrow, that watching includes your direct messages.
That framing probably won’t change most people’s habits overnight. Privacy concerns rarely shift behavior, even legitimate ones. But Reid putting her name behind this alert gives it reach that most policy-change warnings never get. That might be why some users are paying attention for the first time.






























