Why in the News?
- The government has asked WhatsApp to put its planned username feature on hold over concerns that it may increase impersonation, phishing, and online fraud.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- WhatsApp Username Feature
- News Summary (Govt’s Concerns, WhatsApp Response, Significance, etc.)
WhatsApp Username Feature
- WhatsApp has proposed a new username-based feature that would allow users to chat or receive messages without sharing their phone numbers.
- The feature is similar to systems already available on platforms like Telegram and Signal.
- Under the proposed model:
- Users can choose a unique username for their account.
- Other users can contact them using that username instead of their mobile number.
- The feature is meant to improve privacy, especially when interacting with new people.
- Users would still need a phone number to create and operate a WhatsApp account.
- According to WhatsApp, the idea is to let people communicate more privately in situations where sharing a phone number may feel unnecessary or intrusive.
News Summary
- The Union government has raised concerns over WhatsApp’s planned username feature and has asked the company not to roll it out for now.
- A notice has been sent asking the company to provide a detailed explanation within three days and to keep the feature on hold until further consultation is completed.
- Government’s Concerns: The government’s central concern is that the new system could make it easier for bad actors to misuse the platform for:
- Impersonation
- Phishing
- Online fraud
- Digital arrest scams
- Spam messaging
- Officials fear that users may create usernames that closely resemble those of:
- Public figures
- Government institutions
- Verified entities
- Known individuals and organisations
- This could make it difficult for ordinary users, especially those who are not digitally aware, to distinguish genuine accounts from fake ones.
- The concern becomes more serious because impersonation-linked scams are already being carried out through WhatsApp.
- The government believes that allowing contact through usernames, without showing phone numbers upfront, may give fraudsters another tool to mislead users.
WhatsApp’s Response
- WhatsApp has clarified that the feature is not yet live and will be introduced gradually later this year. The company has said it has built several safeguards into the feature.
- These include:
- Reserving high-profile usernames such as those of public figures, government entities, celebrities, and verified Meta accounts.
- Blocking lookalike derivatives of known names.
- Requiring users to know the exact username in order to contact someone.
- Showing useful account information when a first message is received, such as:
- Whether the sender is a new account?
- Whether they are already in the contact list?
- Whether they are part of common groups?
- Whether they are located in a different country?
- Limiting how many new people an account can contact.
- Blocking repeated attempts to guess a username key.
- Using systems to detect and remove common impersonation and abuse patterns.
- The company has also said that impersonation-related abuse will be taken seriously and that accounts violating the rules may lose their usernames or be banned entirely.
Wider Regulatory Context
- This is not the first time WhatsApp has come under government scrutiny.
- Earlier, the Department of Telecommunications had directed the platform to:
- Ensure users cannot access WhatsApp without the registered SIM being active on the device
- Log out WhatsApp Web users every six hours
- While the second direction was rolled back, the SIM-related requirement continues.
- The current development shows that digital platforms are increasingly being examined not just for privacy and encryption issues, but also for how new features could affect cyber safety, impersonation risks, and fraud prevention.
Significance
- The controversy highlights a larger policy challenge in digital governance: how to balance privacy-enhancing features with the need to prevent online abuse and cybercrime.
- On one side, username-based communication can reduce unnecessary exposure of personal phone numbers.
- On the other, if not designed carefully, it may create new risks of deception and identity misuse.
- The government’s intervention suggests that future platform features may face closer scrutiny if they are seen as likely to increase vulnerability for users.