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After more than a decade of promising an ad-free experience, WhatsApp has officially announced that it’ll be introducing advertisements into its popular messaging platform that has long prided itself on keeping users’ conversations free from commercial interruptions. Home to these ads is the Updates tab, a space dedicated to Status updates and the Channels feature.

Since the launch of WhatsApp in 2009, the company has stood out among messaging apps for its commitment to privacy and simplicity. The company’s founders, Brian Acton and Jan Koum, famously adopted a strict “No ads! No games! No gimmicks!” policy. This policy was so important to WhatsApp’s identity that Koum kept a handwritten note with these words taped to his desk as a daily reminder. 

When Facebook (now Meta) acquired WhatsApp for $19 billion in 2014, many users worried that the new ownership would bring changes to the app’s core values. For years, those fears were watered down. However, as Meta sought ways to monetize Whatsapp, tensions and disagreements over privacy and advertising plans between the founders and the parent company gradually worsened, leading to the eventual exit of both Acton and Koum from WhatsApp.

Just like Acton and Koum intended, the new advertising rollout is carefully designed to avoid the core messaging experience, as ads will not appear in personal or group chats. However, they will be on the Updates tab, which includes both the Status feature, where users share photos, videos, and text updates that disappear every 24 hours, as well as the Channels tab, which is a space for following news, creators, and organizations.

According to WhatsApp, here’s how the new advertising features on the Updates tab will work:

  • Ads in Status: Businesses can place sponsored content within the Status feed. Similar to Instagram stories, these ads will appear alongside updates from friends and contacts. As such, users can interact with these ads and even message businesses directly about the advertised products or services.
  • Promoted Channels: Channel owners can now pay to have their channels promoted in Whatsapp’s directory, thereby increasing their visibility and reach among WhatsApp users.
  • Channel Subscriptions: Some channels will offer premium, subscriber-only content for a monthly fee, and WhatsApp will take about 10% commission from these subscriptions.

This implementation represents a major opportunity for WhatsApp to generate revenue seeing as it boasts of over 3 billion monthly active users but contributes little to the parent company’s bottom line. Analysts at Wolfe Research estimate that WhatsApp’s business messaging services could bring in $30-40 billion annually, which is a dramatic increase from the current $1.5-2 billion per year. So, by monetizing the pot of gold the messaging app sits on, which is its global audience, Meta hopes to diversify its revenue streams and reduce its reliance on advertising from Facebook and Instagram. 

For most users, the core WhatsApp experience being private and encrypted messaging, remains unchanged. Ads will only appear in the Updates Tab, and users who don’t use Status or Channels may not notice any difference.

Meta also emphasized that user privacy remains a priority, even with the introduction of ads. Personal messages, calls, and group chats will continue to be protected by end-to-end encryption, and they will never be used for targeting. Instead, ads will be targeted using basic information such as a user’s country, city, language, and which channels they follow or interact with. 

This, however, did not come off as a reassurance that users’ privacy will not be tampered with. Lena Cohen, a technologist at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, warned that “targeted ads based on your personal data are a privacy nightmare, no matter what app they’re on.” 

President of rival messaging app Signal, Meredith Whittaker, also seized the opportunity to promote their own messaging platform in the wake of these privacy concerns, posting on X, “Use Signal. We promise, no AI clutter, and no surveillance ads – whatever the rest of the industry does.”

According to Meta, the advertising features will be rolled out worldwide, with no exceptions for the European Union that is known for its stringent data protection laws, or for any other region at all. As such, all eyes will be on how users respond. Will users accept the changes? Or will they seek out alternative messaging apps, like Signal, that promises to remain ad-free?

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I’m Precious Amusat, Phronews’ Content Writer. I conduct in-depth research and write on the latest developments in the tech industry, including trends in big tech, startups, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence and their global impacts. When I’m off the clock, you’ll find me cheering on women’s footy, curled up with a romance novel, or binge-watching crime thrillers.

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