ADVERTISEMENT

WhatsApp Sets Forward Limit To Five Chats To Tackle Fake News Circulation

WhatsApp will remove the quick forward button that appears next to media messages.

Whatsapp is the most used app in India, according to a ComScore report.  
Whatsapp is the most used app in India, according to a ComScore report.  

WhatsApp today said its users in India will not be allowed to forward more than five chats at once and the company will remove the quick forward button that appears next to media messages, as part of its efforts to reduce circulation of fake messages on the platform that have incited mob lynching incidents.

In a blog post, WhatsApp said its users in India “forward more messages, photos, and videos, than any other country in the world”. The Facebook-owned company has over 1 billion users globally, of which over 200 million are in India.

Opinion
Mob Lynchings: WhatsApp At Risk Of Being Labelled “Abettor”

“Today, we’re launching a test to limit forwarding that will apply to everyone using WhatsApp. In India, we’ll also test a lower limit of five chats at once and we’ll remove the quick forward button next to media messages,” the blog post said.

WhatsApp has received flak from the Indian government over fake news and false information being circulated on its messaging platform. Such messages have incited mob-fury, triggering multiple cases of lynching across the country.

Yesterday, the government shot off a second notice to WhatsApp asking it to come out with effective solutions to curb the menace of fake news beyond just labeling forwards.

Opinion
WhatsApp Shares Tips To Spot Fake News, Hoax

It also warned the company that mediums used for propagation of rumours are liable to be treated as ‘abettors’ and can face legal consequences if they remain “mute spectators”.

While the company is yet to respond to the notice, the blog post said the company believes that such changes will help keep WhatsApp the way it was designed to be—a private messaging application,

“We built WhatsApp as a private messaging app—a simple, secure, and reliable way to communicate with friends and family. And as we’ve added new features, we’ve been careful to try and keep that feeling of intimacy, which people say they love,” it said.

WhatsApp had introduced the option of forwarding multiple chats at once a few years ago, it said. “We are deeply committed to your safety and privacy which is why WhatsApp is end-to-end encrypted, and we’ll continue to improve our app with features like this one,” the blog said.

WhatsApp had previously said it had launched new safety features, including a label that clearly identifies forwarded messages and controls for group conversations in the last few weeks.

The messaging service also brought out a full-page advertisement in leading newspapers, a first in its series of its user-awareness campaign, giving “easy tips” to decide if the information received is indeed true.

It is also working with over half a dozen partners in India to design a digital literacy programme for educating users on spotting false news and staying safe on the popular messaging platform.

Opinion
Lynch Mobs Are India’s Problem, Not WhatsApp’s

In its response to the first notice by the Indian government, WhatsApp had said fake news, misinformation and hoaxes can be checked by the government, civil society and technology companies “working together.”

Outlining steps it has taken to curb abuse of its platform, WhatsApp—in its response sent earlier this month—had said it has the ability to prevent spam but since it cannot see the content of private messages, blocking can be done based only on user reports.

WhatsApp had also told the government that it was “horrified by these terrible acts of violence” and its strategy to deal with the situation involves giving people the controls and information they needed to stay safe while working pro-actively to prevent misuse of the service.

Rumours on WhatsApp have sparked-off a spate of incidents involving mob fury, including one where five men were lynched on suspicion of being child lifters in Maharashtra’s Rainpada village of Dhule district.

More recently, a man was beaten to death, while three others were injured after a mob attacked them, suspecting them to be child-lifters, near Bidar in Karnataka.

The Supreme Court, too, has asked Parliament to consider enacting a new law to effectively deal with incidents of mob lynching, saying “horrendous acts of mobocracy cannot be allowed to become a new norm.