Tag: WhatsApp

  • Israeli Spyware Firm Odered to Pay $167 Million for WhatsApp Hack

    Israeli Spyware Firm Odered to Pay $167 Million for WhatsApp Hack

    A US federal jury ordered Israeli spyware company NSO Group to pay more than $167 million in damages for hacking the devices of approximately 1,400 WhatsApp users in 2019 using its Pegasus software.

    The verdict delivered Tuesday after a five-year legal battle includes $167.25 million in punitive damages and $445,000 in compensatory damages to WhatsApp and its parent company, Meta.

    The US District Court for the Northern District of California rejected NSO Group’s claim of sovereign immunity as a private company, finding that the Pegasus spyware exploited vulnerabilities in WhatsApp’s platform.

    The Pegasus tool enabled “zero-click” attacks that could infect devices without any user interaction, a capability governments allegedly used to surveil journalists, dissidents and activists worldwide.

    Meta hailed the ruling as “the first victory against illegal spyware that threatens the safety and privacy of everyone.”

    “The jury’s decision to force NSO to pay damages is a critical deterrent to this malicious industry against their illegal acts aimed at American companies and our users worldwide,” it said in a statement.

    Evidence presented during the trial revealed WhatsApp was not NSO’s only target. Meta noted that while it stopped the attack vector that exploited the company’s calling system in 2019, “Pegasus has had many other spyware installation methods” targeting different technologies.

    The case began in October 2019 when WhatsApp filed a lawsuit claiming that the NSO Group had deployed malware to some mobile devices.

  • ‪Telegram Will Now Share IP Addresses And Phone Numbers To Authorities‬

    ‪Telegram Will Now Share IP Addresses And Phone Numbers To Authorities‬

    The messaging app Telegram has said it will hand over users’ IP addresses and phone numbers to authorities who have search warrants or other valid legal requests.

    The change to its terms of service and privacy policy “should discourage criminals”, CEO Pavel Durov said in a Telegram post on Monday.

    “While 99.999% of Telegram users have nothing to do with crime, the 0.001% involved in illicit activities create a bad image for the entire platform, putting the interests of our almost billion users at risk,” he continued.

    The announcement marks a significant reversal for Mr Durov, the platform’s Russian-born co-founder who was detained by French authorities last month at an airport just north of Paris.

    Days later, prosecutors there charged him with enabling criminal activity on the platform. Allegations against him include complicity in spreading child abuse images and trafficking of drugs. He was also charged with failing to comply with law enforcement.

    Mr Durov, who has denied the charges, lashed out at authorities shortly after his arrest, saying that holding him responsible for crimes committed by third parties on the platform was both “surprising” and “misguided.”

    Critics say Telegram has become a hotbed of misinformation, child pornography, and terror-related content partly because of a feature that allows groups to have up to 200,000 members.

    Meta-owned WhatsApp, by contrast, limits the size of groups to 1,000.

    Telegram was scrutinized last month for hosting far-right channels that contributed to violence in English cities.

    Earlier this week, Ukraine banned the app on state-issued devices in a bid to minimise threats posed by Russia.

    The arrest of the 39-year old chief executive has sparked debate about the future of free-speech protections on the internet.

    After Mr Durov’s detention, many people began to question whether Telegram was actually a safe place for political dissidents, according to John Scott-Railton, senior researcher at the University of Toronto’s Citizen Lab.

    He says this latest policy change is already being greeted with even more alarm in many communities.

    “Telegram’s marketing as a platform that would resist government demands attracted people that wanted to feel safe sharing their political views in places like Russia, Belarus, and the Middle East,” Mr Scott-Railton said.

    “Many are now scrutinizing Telegram’s announcement with a basic question in mind: does this mean the platform will start cooperating with authorities in repressive regimes?”

    Telegram has not given much clarity on how the company will handle the demands from leaders of such regimes in the future, he added.

    Cybersecurity experts say that while Telegram has removed some groups in the past, it has a far weaker system of moderating extremist and illegal content than competing social media companies and messenger apps.

    Before the recent policy expansion, Telegram would only supply information on terror suspects, according to 404 Media.

    On Monday Mr Durov said the app was now using “a dedicated team of moderators” who were leveraging artificial intelligence to conceal problematic content in search results.

    But making that type of material harder to find likely won’t be enough to fulfill requirements under French or European law, according to Daphne Keller at Stanford University’s Center for Internet and Society.

    “Anything that Telegram employees look at and can recognize with reasonable certainty is illegal, they should be removing entirely,” Ms Keller said.

    In some countries, they also need to notify authorities about particular kinds of seriously illegal content such as child sexual abuse material, she added.

    Ms Keller questioned whether the company’s changes would be enough to satisfy authorities seeking information about targets of investigations, including who they are communicating with and the content of those messages.

    “It sounds like a commitment that is likely less than what law enforcement wants,” Ms Keller said.

    By BBC

  • Facebook, WhatsApp Are The Most Popular Social Media Platforms In Kenya, Report Says

    Facebook, WhatsApp Are The Most Popular Social Media Platforms In Kenya, Report Says

    Meta owned social media platform, Facebook, has firmed its position as Kenya’s top social media platform with a share of 49.4pc.

    Audience Measurement and Industry Trends report covering the third quarter of financial year 2023/24 by the Communications Authority indicates that the social media giant with an estimated 2.9 billion active monthly users globally as enhanced its position in three successive quarters as the most used network for social interactions and source of news.

    The social media network enhanced its position from 45.2pc in first quarter to 47.5pc in the second quarter.

    Another Meta platform, Whatsapp which boasts of at least three billion active monthly users worldwide had 47pc of users.

    “The prevalence of Facebook and WhatsApp in social media mentions highlights their extensive adoption and influential presence in the Kenyan digital landscape,” said CA.

    YouTube emerged as the third most popular social media platform in Kenya with a market share of 29.5pc while TikTok grew to 23pc from 17.8pc to 23pc.

    Instagram, a popular photo and video sharing social media platform site had a share of 13.3pc while X,, formerly Twitter commanded a market share of 10.7pc after growing from 7.9pc in the previous quarter.

    Other sites used in Kenya to get news include Google, Operamini, Chrome, Telegram, email, Snapchat and LinkedIn.

    Mobile phones still remain the most popular devices Kenyans use to access internet at 87.2pc.

    “The most mode of internet access is primarily through smartphones, underscoring the pivotal role these devices play in facilitating connectivity and information access for a wide range of users. As mobile technology continues to advance, ensuring equitable access to smartphones becomes crucial for fostering digital inclusion and bridging gaps in connectivity across various demographics,” stated the regulator.

    Laptops emerged second most preferred mode of access the internet with a share of 5pc, smart TV 1.9pc, tablet 0.5pc and desktop with 0.9pc.

    Latest data from the authority indicates that the country currently has 51 million mobile data subscribers.

    During the period under review, total advertisement expenditure dropped to Ksh 15 billion from Ksh 17 billion.

  • How To Edit Messages On WhatsApp

    How To Edit Messages On WhatsApp

    For smartphone users with fumble fingers, or anyone who sent an embarrassing misspelling or autocorrect, help is finally at hand.

    WhatsApp, one of the world’s most popular messaging apps, has introduced a long-desired feature: the ability to edit messages after sending them.

    “For the moments when you make a mistake or simply change your mind, you can now edit your sent messages on WhatsApp,” the app said in a Monday blog post.

    Like Twitter did with its Blue subscription-only function, the edited texts will have a notification saying that the message was edited. Unlike Twitter, though, there will be no way to see the previous versions of an edited message.

    The feature will only be valid for 15 minutes after sending a message – unlike Twitter, which allows its Blue subscribers a half-hour to edit tweets. After that, there will be no way to edit the message, but it can still be deleted, with a “This message has been deleted” notification in its place.

    “This feature has started rolling out to users globally and will be available to everyone in the coming weeks,” added the blog post.

    As of this writing, the feature does not appear available in Kenya yet, at least for some smartphones.

  • WhatsApp Is Introducing A New Interesting Feature

    WhatsApp Is Introducing A New Interesting Feature

    Instant messaging platform WhatsApp, which is owned by Meta, has announced that it would be introducing ‘Communities’, a feature for grouping together similar interest groups.

    This feature however will initially be rolled out to a small, select number of groups and will let thousands participate in a community that hosts multiple sub-group chats.

    The reason for introducing this feature is that various organizations, from a school to a business whose employees communicate on WhatsApp, can more easily organize discussions and have their admins message everyone across different groups.
    Users can create a community by adding groups featuring a similar theme and admins can then manage those groups within and send messages to all groups at the same time.

    This way individual conversations related to that group can continue while also getting announcements that impact all groups at the same time. ‘Communities’ will support end-to-end encryption.

    Regarding discoverability, WhatsApp has stated that it will not be adding the option to search or discover new communities unlike “other apps”. It will also be reducing the ability to forward messages from the current limit of five to just one group at a time. This move is designed to proactively thwart the spread of potentially harmful posts, like spam and illegal sexual content.

    The platform will also be banning individual community members or admins, and disbanding a community if it becomes aware of illegal, violent, or hateful activities within a community.

    WhatsApp will also introduce improvements to how individual groups work, regardless of whether they are part of a community or not.

    Groups will be able to have emoji reactions for messages, so members can react to a particular message without sending separate emoji messages.

    Admins will also be able to delete messages in a group, which will then be removed from everyone’s device. File sharing will be upgraded to support files up to 2GB in size and finally, one-tap voice calling will now support up to 32 members.

  • Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp reconnecting after nearly six-hour outage

    Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp reconnecting after nearly six-hour outage

    Oct 4 (Reuters) – Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp at least partially reconnected to the global internet late on Monday afternoon Eastern time, nearly six hours into an outage that paralyzed the social media platform.

    Facebook and its WhatsApp and Instagram apps went dark at around noon Eastern time (1600 GMT), in what website monitoring group Downdetector said was the largest such failure it had ever seen.

    The outage was the second blow to the social media giant in as many days after a whistleblower on Sunday accused the company of repeatedly prioritizing profit over clamping down on hate speech and misinformation.

    “To every small and large business, family, and individual who depends on us, I’m sorry,” Facebook Chief Technology Officer Mike Schroepfer tweeted, adding that it “may take some time to get to 100%.”

    Shares of Facebook, which has nearly 2 billion daily active users, fell 4.9% on Monday, their biggest daily drop since last November, amid a broader selloff in technology stocks. Shares rose about half a percent in after-hours trade following resumption of service.

    Security experts said the disruption could be the result of an internal mistake, though sabotage by an insider would be theoretically possible.

    Soon after the outage started, Facebook acknowledged users were having trouble accessing its apps but did not provide any specifics about the nature of the problem or say how many users were affected by the outage.

    The error message on Facebook’s webpage suggested an error in the Domain Name System (DNS), which allows web addresses to take users to their destinations. A similar outage at cloud company Akamai Technologies Inc  took down multiple websites in July.

    Several Facebook employees who declined to be named said that they believed that the outage was caused by an internal routing mistake to an internet domain that was compounded by the failures of internal communication tools and other resources that depend on that same domain in order to work.

    Facebook, which is the second largest digital advertising platform in the world, was losing about $545,000 in U.S. ad revenue per hour during the outage, according to estimates from ad measurement firm Standard Media Index.

    On Sunday, Frances Haugen, who worked as a product manager on the civic misinformation team at Facebook, revealed that she was the whistleblower who provided documents underpinning a Wall Street Journal investigation and a Senate hearing on Instagram’s harm to teen girls.

    Haugen was due to urge the U.S. Congress on Tuesday to regulate the company, which she plans to liken to tobacco companies that for decades denied that smoking damaged health, according to prepared testimony seen by Reuters.

  • Facebook-Owned WhatsApp Admits A Spy Video Bugs On Its Old Versions

    Facebook-Owned WhatsApp Admits A Spy Video Bugs On Its Old Versions

    The Facebook-owned Whats App posted a security advisory about the bug, named CVE-2019-11931, which affects earlier versions of the app on both Android and iOS devices. They quoted India’s Computer Emergency Response Team that issued a warning over a malicious video allegedly intended to remotely access WhatsApp accounts.

    The security agency issued the advisory after the Indian government said it is empowered to “intercept, monitor or decrypt… any information generated, transmitted, received, or stored” on the phones or devices of its citizens.

    According to The Independentthe video allows hackers to access people’s messages when they share the MP4 file with their contacts.

    “These users were instead targeted with spyware developed by controversial Israeli technology firm NSO Group,” The Independent quoted a spokesperson.

    WhatsApp confirmed the warning, however, they refuted claims linking the hacking attempts to a shared video file.

    “We make public reports on potential issues we have fixed consistently with industry best practices. In this instance, there is no reason to believe that users were impacted.”

    Last month, WhatsApp revealed that around 1,400 activists and journalists were targeted with spyware developed by controversial Israeli software firm NSO Group.

    The same bug was also installed in the messenger’s video calling system in May this year.

    “In May we stopped an attack where an advanced cyber actor exploited our video calling to install malware on user devices. There’s a possibility this phone number was impacted, and we want to make sure you know how to keep your mobile phone secure,” the message stated.

    WhatsApp users are being urged to update to the latest version of the app due to fears that spy agencies are snooping on people through a major security vulnerability.

     

  • WhatsApp To Restrict Forwarded Messages To 5 Users Or Groups

    WhatsApp To Restrict Forwarded Messages To 5 Users Or Groups

    In what the company term as a move to curb widespread of fake news or extremist content, WhatsApp has announced that they are going to block users from forwarding messages to more than five individuals or groups.

    “We settled on five because we believe this is a reasonable number to reach close friends while helping prevent abuse,” Carl Woog, Head of Communications at WhatsApp said in a press meeting at Jakarta on Monday.

    The decision to limit recipients of forwards to five was made in India last July as the country has one of the highest forwarding rates in the world. According to the Guardian, India is WhatsApp’s largest market with more than 200 million users.

    The action comes after a spate of mob killings across the country that were linked to inflammatory messages forwarded using WhatsApp. Critics noted concerns over WhatsApp’s message-forwarding feature that has also been largely blamed for helping for spreading information without authentication.

    According to the company, a forwarded text message to a new recipient is marked as forwarded in the light grey text but otherwise appears indistinguishable from an original message sent by a contact.

    “(This) strips away the identity of the sender and allows messages to spread virally with little accountability,” the WhatsApp report reads.

    In Kenya, a social media consumption report revealed that WhatsApp and Facebook are the most widely used platforms at over 88%. And WhatsApp remains the worlds most popular messaging app, the company has over 1.5 billion active users globally.

  • Facebook And WhatsApp Group Admins Will Be Required To Get License From The Government

    Facebook And WhatsApp Group Admins Will Be Required To Get License From The Government

    Are you a group admin on Facebook or whatsApp? You might soon be required to obtain clearance from the Communication Authority (CA). Before setting up groups on WhatsApp and Facebook group admins will be required to apply for licences from the CA if a Bill sponsored by Malava MP Malulu Injendi gets passed.

    The Bill which is  headed to Parliament this week also proposes that users and group administrators who allow offending content on their social media platforms be jailed. Should the Bill pass, social media group administrators will be required to inform the CA their intent to form any groups and shall be responsible for the contents posted and discussion on the platform they control. This means taking full responsibility of whatever information is posted in that group, with or without the admins approval.

    “A social media user shall ensure that any content published, written or shared through the social media platform does not degrade or intimidate a recipient of the content,” reads part of The Kenya Information and Communication (Amendment) Bill, 2019.

    The group administrators will be tasked with kicking out those who post offending content, they shall also be required to carry out due diligence to ensure that all its users “are of age of majority.”

    The Bill will put a huge burden of a fine not exceeding two hundred thousand shillings for administrators whose groups are found to be allowing offending content. “Any person who contravenes the provision of this section commits an offence and shall be liable upon conviction to a fine not exceeding two hundred thousand shillings, or to an imprisonment of a term not exceeding one year,” the bill states.

    To establish a group on both those platforms, the Bill proposes that one must have a physical address and data showing all its members.

  • Facebook Upgrades WhatsApp’s Multi-platform Feature To Enable The Messaging App Work On Multiple Accounts

    Facebook Upgrades WhatsApp’s Multi-platform Feature To Enable The Messaging App Work On Multiple Accounts

    Facebook has now confirmed that they were working on a new multi-platform feature.  The feature has now been confirmed and WhatsApp users will be able to access the popular messaging app on their multiple devices simultaneously.

    This is according to WhatsApp tipster WABetaInfo, which stated that it’s “no longer a rumor, it’s confirmed”. Confirming that Whats App users will be able to use our WhatsApp account across multiple devices. It includes WhatsApp for Windows (UWP, when available), so you can use WhatsApp on your PC if your phone has no connection. iPhone/Android and iPadOS included.”

    WABetaInfor had also revealed that WhatsApp messenger is working on a new desktop client based on the Universal Windows Platform (UWP). According to Facebook, the new software will allow one to use the messaging service even when their phone’s not connected to the internet. but that’s not immediately clear when the UWP app will be rolled out to users.

    Right now your WhatsApp account is linked to your phone number, and in order to sign into WhatsApp on a device, you need to be logged out on all or any other devices. Many people have been wondering why WhatsApp restricts users from using multiple devices considering that Telegram allows it and still manages to deliver messages securely using end-to-end-encryption on both devices.

    Facebook’s other apps, Instagram and Messenger are both able to run on multiple devices simultaneously something that makes even less sense is when the same Facebook company makes an exception to the rule by allowing users to run WhatsApp Web from a browser while still logged in on their phones.

    WhatsApp’s web version of its popular messaging app was released back in 2015, but in order to use it, one needs to have their phone connected to the Internet. Users also have to authenticate their accounts on computers by scanning a QR code on the web client through the built-in camera functionality within the WhatsApp application on their phone.

    There was no technical reason why it couldn’t be done, this is the era where everyone using multiple devices in their daily workflow. Logically, allowing whats App users to use the App on multiple devices simultaneously is a very big step from Facebook and the update is definitely, without a doubt going to boost app users.

    The upgrade has been introduced at the right time where everyone wants apps and in this case, WhatsApp is able to access WhatsApp on their Phones, Phablets, Tablets, and PCs without having to rely on a browser-based solution. The incorporation of the multi-platform feature on WhatsApp will be the best upgrade from Facebook.

    On top of the multi-platform feature and the UWP app, WhatsApp messenger is separately working on several other features such as WhatsApp Payment which possibly could be one of the biggest features of the Facebook-owned messaging platform. This feature will enable users to perform payment transactions within the app.

    Another feature getting tested as well is the Quick Edit Media Shortcut, which would allow users to edit media files that have been shared on the messaging app. It can be used to edit media files quickly that are shared on both individual and group chats.

    According to reports, WhatsApp is set to launch a voice message preview feature for iOS. How will it work; WhatsApp will send push notifications for voice messages along with a preview tool. This means that iPhone users can open the voice message directly from the notification panel. At present, users on iPhones and Android devices need to open the chat to listen to the voice messages.

    WhatsApp also recently started rolling out the ‘Frequently Forwarded’ feature in a move to curb down fake news on its platform. The new feature marks messages that are sent multiple times as “forwarded many times.”