Google Messages Now Lets Your Boss Spy On Your Chats – Here’s How

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Google RCS Messages Adds Enterprise Archival for Pixel Devices

A new archival function for Google’s RCS Messages is designed to help companies with record-keeping and responding to legal requests related to employee communications. As Google explains, it’s to “help ensure regulatory compliance with Android RCS Archival on Google Pixel.” This new method moves away from “carrier-level logging” and allows third-party archival apps to work with Google Messages on work devices, enabling a more reliable way to secure and store employee communications for any legal event or situation.

What RCS Archival Captures

If you use a Google Pixel as your work device, and your IT team enables the feature, your messages will be archived. Not just the original message, but also when you edit or delete it. That’s important since Google now lets you edit sent RCS messages, though it can only be done up to 15 minutes after you send them. Those edited and deleted messages will remain archived, and the changes will, as well.

Encryption and Employee Notifications

Google enforces encrypted RCS messages on all Android devices and has done so for some time now. End-to-end encryption is still supported and will apply when messages travel between devices, but these archival features make it possible for employers to retain records. Google does mention that employees will receive alerts and notifications when the archival features are active, so you won’t be left in the dark if you’re affected.

Supported Archival Vendors

Currently, Google names third-party vendors with support, including Celltrust, Smarsh, and 3rd Eye, with “more archival apps coming soon in 2026.” Celltrust, for example, makes mobile communication compliance possible within an organization and is largely used in finance, government, and other highly regulated sectors to capture, connect, archive, and supervise communications—precisely what the new archival feature supports.

Compliance Requirements

The goal is not necessarily to remain clandestine and spy on individuals, but instead to comply with legal and regulatory requirements, which could have dire consequences if not followed. FINRA Rule 4510, for instance, requires the recording and storage of all business communications. While not ideal for user privacy, the new archival functions in Google RCS will offer notifications and transparency to alert you when it has been activated.

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