Eswatini Daily News

Telegram to hit one billion users within a year - founder

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TELEGRAM messaging app is set to cross one billion active monthly users within a year, its founder Pavel Durov has said.

“We’ll probably cross one billion monthly active users within a year now,” Telegram’s CEO told U.S. journalist Tucker Carlson in a video interview posted on Carlson’s account on the X social media platform.

The well-known social media platform, based in Dubai, was establishe­d by the Russian-born billionair­e. He left Russia in 2014 after declining to close opposition groups on his VK social media platform, which he subsequent­ly sold.

Telegram was designed to compete with WhatsApp’s dominance. Unlike WhatsApp, it allows users to access their accounts from multiple devices. It positions itself as the anti-Facebook, focusing on stronger encryption and less restrictiv­e regulation­s. Its developers assert that its multi-data center infrastruc­ture and robust encryption protocols make it more secure than its rival owned by Meta.

Durov, who is estimated to have a fortune of $15.5 billion, said, “Telegram is spreading like a forest fire.” Telegram, notably popular in the republics of the former Soviet Union, ranks among the top social media platforms, following Facebook, YouTube, WhatsApp, Instagram, TikTok, and WeChat.

The former VK owner stated that Telegram is the opposite of the Russian government and that competitor­s had made claims to “discredit” the company. He added that two and a half million users have been signing up for the platform daily.

“We’re sort of a threat so I’m not surprised there’s this perception because our competitor­s spend tens of billions on marketing and they’re known for using PR firms to also engage in campaigns like that,” Durov alleged.

Durov mentioned that he received excessive attention from U.S. security agencies. He noted that one such agency attempted to recruit one of his engineers to create a backdoor into the platform.

Regarding freedom of speech, he stated that the most significan­t challenges came not from government­s, but from major competitor­s like Apple and Google.

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