10.9 C
London
Wednesday, March 29, 2023
HomeWorldWhatsApp sets new rules

WhatsApp sets new rules

Date:

Related stories

Vetting for potential NDC flagbearer, Ernest Kobeah postponed

Ernest Kwaku Kobeah, one of the four potential flagbearer...

Haney and Lomachenko set date for Sin City showdown

Undisputed lightweight champ Devin Haney will collide with Vasyl...

Nashville school shooting: Police report indicates attacker hid guns in parents’ house

According to investigators, the shooter who murdered six people...

Son feels ‘responsible’ for Conte’s Spurs exit

Heung-Min Son feels "responsible" for Antonio Conte's Tottenham exit because...

WhatsApp has said it will limit how many times messages can be forwarded in India, to curb the spread of false information on its platform.

The announcement comes after a spate of mob lynchings were linked to messages that circulated on WhatsApp groups.

The government on Thursday reissued a warning to the company that it could face legal consequences if it remained a “mute spectator”.

With more than 200 million users, India is WhatsApp’s biggest market.

Groups on WhatsApp can have a maximum of 256 people. Many of the messages that are believed to have triggered violence were forwarded to multiple groups which had more than 100 members each.

In a blog published on its website, the company announced that it was “launching a test to limit forwarding that will apply to everyone using WhatsApp”.

For Indian users, however, the forwarding option will be limited even further. A WhatsApp spokesperson for India told the BBC that this means a single person would be able to forward one message only five times.

WhatsApp added that they hoped this measure would curb the frequency of messages being forwarded.

The company also said it would be removing the “quick forward button” next to messages containing pictures or video.

These changes come in the wake of a series of mob lynchings that have seen at least 18 people killed across India since April 2018. Media reports put the number of dead higher.

Police say it is proving hard to get people to believe that the messages are false.

In a recent lynching in the north-eastern state of Tripura, the victim was a man employed by the local government to go around villages to dispel rumours being spread on social media.

Read: Twitter cracks down on ‘fake’ followers

India’s federal government had earlier warned WhatsApp, a Facebook-owned company, that it could not evade “accountability and responsibility” for the content its users were sharing.

WhatsApp had responded by saying it was “horrified by these terrible acts of violence”, and that the situation was a “challenge that requires government, civil society and technology companies to work together”.

The messaging app is the single largest internet-based service available to people in India. It has tremendous reach, allowing messages to spread exponentially and enabling mobs to gather quickly.

Earlier this month, the company outlined steps it was taking to help address the problem, which included enabling users to leave groups and block people more easily.

 

Source: BBC

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our content

Latest stories