The Mercury

Messaging war hots up

WHATSAPP AND FACEBOOK MESSENGER TARGETED

- Gwen Ackerman

THE newly named chief of Japanese retailer Rakuten Inc’s messaging app Viber plans to quickly introduce new products to better compete with Facebook’s WhatsApp and Messenger as the market faces increasing regulation in the EU.

Chief executive officer Djamel Agaoua has an aggressive plan for Viber and plans to roll out next month a new version of the app, which will function more like a platform than a single-purpose app with features that will eventually include e-commerce and banking.

Users will be able to open a chat window with friends, look at restaurant­s, decide where to go, and make a reservatio­n – all without leaving Viber.

Payment through the app is planned, but won’t be part of the initial roll-out, he added.

“My first priority is to expand the user base and make Viber available for every user to connect and communicat­e freely,” said Agaoua. “Second is security and privacy, and third is transformi­ng Viber into a platform so services like those Rakuten provides can be provided to our users.”

Viber began encrypting messages in April, said Agaoua, whose appointmen­t was announced recently and who will be based in Israel where most of the company’s 350 employees work, primarily in research and developmen­t. While the company will be able to say which users spoke to one another, it won’t be able to provide the content of messages, he added.

Agaoua takes Viber’s helm as the EU is set to review regulation of internet companies and messaging services, and considers extending telecoms industry security rules to include limiting access to consumers’ data. A draft of the rules unveiled in Brussels last month would give online users more control of their settings and limit the “overload of consent requests” for cookies people encounter when browsing the web.

This month, Viber officials will be in the UK parliament, along with other global messaging companies, to explain how they work as part of what Agaoua called an “educationa­l phase” in which the companies and regulators attempt to understand one another. The global messaging market is growing. Online research portal Statista forecasts the number of users communicat­ing via dedicated apps will reach two billion next year, up from one billion in 2014. According to digital intelligen­ce company SimilarWeb, Viber is the most popular messaging service in eight countries surveyed, while Facebook Messenger was the favourite in 53 and WhatsApp in 96.

“Messaging apps is where users spend most of their time and messaging could become the operating system of the mobile device,” said Agaoua, who joined Viber from mobile ad company MobPartner, acquired by Cheetah Mobile Inc, in 2015. “That is what I came for. The platform strategy will be coming in a month. Speed is the name of the game and we will try to run faster.”

Viber has also said it will offer free calls to those people affected by President Donald Trump’s travel ban. “We saw this incredible situation where people were stuck in airports and couldn’t communicat­e with families and couldn’t go back to their resident country,” Agaoua said.

 ??  ?? Djamel Agaoua, the Viber chief executive, has a plan to beat WhatsApp
Djamel Agaoua, the Viber chief executive, has a plan to beat WhatsApp

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