The Daily Telegraph

Whatsapp backtracks on ‘Typing’ status following complaints

- By Matthew Field

WHATSAPP has backtracke­d on a subtle design change that infuriated hundreds of users.

The messaging service added capital letters to status updates – of “Online” and “Typing” that appear within conversati­ons in the app.

Users of the messaging app were left “irritated”, “angry”, “annoyed” and feeling “icky” after they noticed the change. For years, Whatsapp, run by Facebook owner Meta, has displayed a status notice for users in the conversati­ons in its app. These appear under a users’ profile picture and typically read “online” or “typing”, all in lowercase letters. However, in recent days Whatsapp quietly altered the words, adding a more grammatica­lly correct capital “O” or capital “T” to millions of users’ statuses. People began to notice the minor alteration last week, but the unexpected change prompted outrage from users across social media yesterday.

Sam Mcalister, the former BBC journalist notable for securing an interview with Prince Andrew and author of the book Scoops, said in a social media post: “Has anyone else noticed that the ‘o’ in ‘online’ on Whatsapp has now been capitalise­d to ‘Online’ ... no idea why this is irritating me so much.” Some users pointed out that although adding a capital letter to the digital status would be more grammatica­lly convention­al, the change still irked them.

Within hours, Whatsapp had started to reverse the changes. A spokesman confirmed: “This was just a small test, but it’s going back to normal now.”

Technology businesses typically make thousands of tiny design changes to their websites and apps every year, testing them out on small numbers of users to gauge the reaction – a process known as “A/B testing”.

Matt Navarra, a social media consultant and former government communicat­ions adviser, said Meta and Whatsapp are “obsessed with testing”.

He added: “Even the smallest, most subtle tweaks can increase the time spent using an app or alter user behaviour in other ways. Some platform changes are often only seen by a very small percentage of users. Many tests get killed before ever reaching Meta’s nearly four billion users.”

These tests are often kept under wraps or go unnoticed by users before they are rolled out more widely.

Previous design changes by social media giants have frustrated users, although the blowback has rarely put them off using the apps entirely. In 2006, when Facebook only had a few million users, it launched the now ubiquitous News Feed, which included a stream of updates from a person’s friends. The change led to immediate uproar and threats to boycott the site over privacy concerns.

However, Mark Zuckerberg pressed on with the change which has remained a major feature of Facebook’. In 2022, under threat from Tiktok, Meta also made major changes to Instagram, adding more videos and changing its algorithm to serve up more clips to users. The alteration­s led to social media stars including Kylie Jenner and Kim Kardashian threatenin­g to quit the app. The anger forced Adam Mosseri, the head of Instagram, to apologise and promise to roll back some of the new features. But despite users’ protests, tech giants such as Meta will typically press ahead with changes if they believe they are what users actually want, based on the data gathered from their testing.

While Mr Mosseri admitted the company needed to rethink its changes to Instagram, he insisted “more and more of Instagram is going to become video over time”. In February, Meta reported the total number of people using at least one of its apps had climbed 6 per cent to four billion people, suggesting a few disgruntle­d users have done little to slow its growth.

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