Skip to main content

WhatsApp follows Facebook and YouTube to over 2 billion monthly users

WhatsApp has joined the 2 billion users club. The Facebook-owned messaging company today announced that the 11-year-old app now hosts over 2 billion monthly users — up from 1.5 billion in 2017 and about 500 million short of Facebook’s 2.5 billion user base. After Facebook and YouTube, WhatsApp is the third app worldwide to have crossed 2 billion users.

Recommended Videos

“There are so many significant and special moments that take place over WhatsApp and we are humbled and honored to reach this milestone. We know that the more we connect, the more we have to protect. As we conduct more of our lives online, protecting our conversations is more important than ever,” WhatsApp wrote in a blog post.

WhatsApp’s CEO Will Cathcart took the opportunity to reiterate the messaging service’s security commitments. “For all of human history, people have been able to communicate privately with each other and we don’t think that should go away in a modern society,” Cathcart added in an exclusive interview with the Wall Street Journal.

Cathcart also addressed WhatsApp’s constant struggles with governments across the globe that have hounded the messaging giant to integrate backdoors and called agreeing to do so “an inherently unacceptable risk.”

Incidentally, a few weeks ago, rival messaging app Telegram’s founder, Pavel Durov, accused WhatsApp of deliberately planting backdoors for complying with local regulations and governments. “WhatsApp uses the words ‘end-to-end encryption’ as some magic incantation that alone is supposed to automatically make all communications secure. However, this technology is not a silver bullet that can guarantee you absolute privacy by itself,” Durov said.

While he didn’t discuss the company’s revenue plans, Cathcart said making WhatsApp interoperable with the rest of Facebook’s (unencrypted) messaging platform will be “technically challenging”.

About a month ago, it was reported that Facebook has shelved its plan to bring ads to WhatsApp Status. Therefore, how the social media giant plans to cash in on its hefty $22 billion investment continues to hang in the balance. However, Facebook has likely pivoted its monetization attention to WhatsApp Business that will potentially be more lucrative and scalable than ads. That’s primarily because ad returns in WhatsApp’s most active regions like India and Brazil are not as significant as, say, the U.S. or Canada.

Shubham Agarwal
Shubham Agarwal is a freelance technology journalist from Ahmedabad, India. His work has previously appeared in Firstpost…
WhatsApp Communities want to be your private social media
Whatsapp Communities on Samsung smart phones.

WhatsApp is adding a Communities feature to the eponymous instant messaging platform, adding a social media aspect to it that will have all group conversations protected by end-to-end encryption. Unlike the new community feature on Twitter that brings together like-minded users, the core idea of Communities on WhatsApp is that it allows multiple groups to be aggregated into one super-group.

But unlike social media platforms such as Facebook or Twitter, a WhatsApp Community won’t be openly discoverable. The phone numbers of users also won’t be publicly visible to all Community members. Only the admin and other members of a group can see them.

Read more
WhatsApp backups may soon count against Google Drive storage
Person texting on a smartphone using WhatsApp.

New evidence found in a beta build of WhatsApp for Android suggests that Google may no longer be offering unlimited storage for WhatsApp backups.

This probably shouldn’t come as a big surprise, as Google has gradually been clamping down on its unlimited storage offerings. For years, Google offered storage allotments for Google Drive customers that ranged from generous to downright unlimited, but the search giant has slowly been walking that back lately.

Read more
WhatsApp Buisness is beta testing a new shortcut for quick replies
Close up of WhatsApp icon as seen on a smartphone display. Credits: WhatsApp official.

WhatsApp has released several new updates to enhance the platform’s engagement rate. Now, the company has enabled a new shortcut for quick replies on the beta versions of both Android and iOS , though some users who have installed the latest update may still not see this option. This is because the option has been rolled out only to select beta testers, and others may need to wait for further updates to see this option enabled.
"Quick replies" was one of the earliest features introduced to the WhatsApp Business platform. It allows for reusing frequent messages via keyboard shortcuts, a little similar to how the G-board memory works when typing out similar messages or emails. To use quick replies, a user needs to type out "/" as suggested by "WABetaInfo", and then select the message to send from the list.
WhatsApp's several major updates in 2021 have made it the market leader in messenger downloads. NurPhoto/Getty Images
The reasons for adding this shortcut are currently unknown, but the real benefits will be experienced once the update is available to a wider audience. At the moment, the new shortcut option has been added to the chat share action menu that can be seen by both Android and iOS device users.
What's next?
Meanwhile, WhatsApp has plans for several updates for 2022, including an option for hiding the "last seen" view for specific contacts. The social media giant's basic messenger and business versions are currently at the number 2 and number 5 positions, respectively, in the "free communication apps" section in the Google Play Store, compared to Telegram, which is at number 3. However, the combination of 5.5 billion downloads from WhatsApp apps on Android makes it the clear market leader. 

Read more