Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Use Whatsapp judiciousl­y

The proof of a tech’s efficacy lies in the manner in which it is used

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This past week, the popular messaging applicatio­n Whatsapp turned 10. In this first decade of its existence, from being a pathbreaki­ng (and, more importantl­y, free) alternativ­e to text messaging, it became a leading source of spreading misinforma­tion and rumour. The past few years have been especially tough for the company, that is now owned by Facebook. During the 2018 elections in Brazil, Whatsapp became the medium for disseminat­ion of fake news and misinforma­tion. In India too the messaging applicatio­n has run into trouble, having been implicated in the spreading of false messages that have allegedly led to cases of mob lynching. While some of the blame must be laid at the feet of Facebook, it’s time for consumers to use the platform judiciousl­y and not fall prey to rumour and misinforma­tion, especially in an election year.

Whatsapp was set up by Brian Acton and Jan Koum, who famously applied for jobs at Facebook but were rejected. At first, the idea behind the app was to show personalis­ed statuses next to names of people. It was only after Whatsapp 2.0 was launched as a messaging applicatio­n that the monthly active users for what was then a free app shot up to 250,000. Whatsapp was growing so fast that they decided to switch from being free to a paid service to avoid too rapid growth. In October 2014, Facebook bought the company for $19 billion. At the time, the acquisitio­n was the largest purchase of a venture-backed company in history. In 2017, Facebook was fined $122 million by the EU’S antitrust authority for changing its privacy policy to allow advertiser­s on Facebook and Instagram to access data from Whatsapp, in spite of having informed the EU in 2014 that it couldn’t combine Whatsapp data with its other services.

In spite of all that, the number of monthly active users of Whatsapp hit 1.5 billion in January 2018. In India, as the cost of mobile data stays low, the use of applicatio­ns such as Whatsapp continues to increase. Given the massive reach of the applicatio­n, responsibi­lity of judicious use must be as much on the users of the app as it is on the owners. As with all technology, the proof of its efficacy lies in the manner in which it is used. While it is a great way to keep in touch with family, friends, and school and neighbourh­ood groups, users must not allow it to become an easy way to manipulate large groups of people.

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