Blackphone vendor Silent Circle fighting for survival; Facebook Messenger to get end-to-end encryption

More wireless news from across the web:

> Silent Circle, the firm behind the privacy-focused Blackphone, appears to be circling the drain. It has laid off 15 percent of its workforce in the last six months. Forbes article

> Facebook today rolled out a beta version of a new Facebook Messenger feature called "Secret Conversations." The feature provides end-to-end encryption for users. Wired article

> Americans, particularly younger ones, are increasingly shifting to mobile phones to get their news, according to a new Pew study. San Francisco Chronicle article

Telecom News

> CenturyLink, Frontier Communications and a group of service providers have formed the "Invest in Broadband for America" coalition as the latest effort to encourage FCC to reconsider its business data services proposal. Article

European Wireless News

> Leading European telcos are warning that net neutrality regulations put into place by EU regulators could stymie the rollout of 5G networks. Article

Cable News

> Google has paid an undisclosed sum for TV Everywhere technology services vendor Anvato. Article

And finally… The arrival of Nintendo's long-awaited Pokemon Go mobile game has caused shares in the gaming company to soar. CNBC article