Are you still using WhatsApp? You might have noticed a steady stream of friends and family ditching the Facebook-owned messenger in recent weeks.
The move has been prompted by the company's decision to change its privacy policy and terms, reserving the right to share some user data with the Facebook app. Planned for February, the new policy caused widespread confusion among its users. Anyone who wanted to continue using the service would have to agree to the new terms, or simply delete their account.
And so many chose the latter option, shifting their messaging to another platform.
WhatsApp went into damage control mode. It clarified that the new terms were to facilitate users messaging businesses, but said it would delay the introduction of policy until May. It also made clear that European users – including the UK – would not be forced to share data, and any plan to share data with Facebook or other group companies would only be done once the company had agreed this with the Irish Data Protection Commission.
Niamh Sweeney, WhatsApp director of policy for Europe, the Middle East and Africa, took to Twitter to clear up the confusion.
"The latest update to our privacy policy is about providing clearer, more detailed information to our users on how and why we use data," Sweeney said.
The explanation may have fallen on deaf ears, with some users saying they planned to change service regardless
"It's also about improving how businesses use WhatsApp to connect with customers. The updated policy provides info on how businesses using the WhatsApp API to talk to customers can now do so using a Facebook-provided service to help them manage their chats with customers."
Personal conversations still have end to end encryption, meaning WhatsApp can't see the content.
"This update does not expand our ability to share data with Facebook," a spokesperson for Facebook said in a statement. "While not everyone shops with a business on WhatsApp today, we think that more people will choose to do so in the future and it's important people are aware of these services."
When Facebook bought the WhatsApp messaging service in 2014, it pledged not to share user data with its other companies.
But the explanation may have fallen on deaf ears, with some users saying they planned to change service regardless. It may just have been the last straw for some users who joined WhatsApp when it was pledging to protect user privacy and feel that there has been a shift in policy. When Facebook bought the messaging service in 2014, it pledged not to share user data with its other companies.
So if you have decided that you no longer want to use WhatsApp, what are the alternatives?
Signal
Signal has been one of the beneficiaries of the WhatsApp announcement, with the company seeing a spike in new users in the days after the new terms and conditions were revealed. The simple, secure messaging app offers text, voice and video messaging, with group chats and the ability to send files to recipients. You can use it on mobile devices and desktops, including linux.
Who is behind it?
Signal is managed by a not-for-profit organisation, and is funded by grants and donations. Signal Messenger is a subsidiary of the SIgnal Technology FOundation, which was set up in 2018 by entrepreneur and cryptographer Moxie Marlinspike and WhatsApp co-founder Brian Acton.
As of December, it had 20 million monthly active users – though if all the notifications we alone have had are anything to go by, that number is probably considerably higher by now.
Why should I use it?
Signal comes highly recommended. The company has the seal of approval from Edward Snowden, security expert Bruce Schneier and Twitter boss Jack Dorsey. Elon Musk has also given it a shout out recently.
Open sourced, Signal also has the benefit of being both free to download and easy to use.
Messages have end to end encryption by default, so your messages – including voice and video calls – are secure and can only be read by the intended recipient. That encryption is well regarded too; it's open source and built on the Signal Protocol.
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