
Former WhatsApp chief business officer Neeraj Arora says that he regrets the $22 billion sale of WhatsApp to Facebook. In a series of tweets, he explained how WhatsApp has veered off the course that the founders had imagined for the service after the acquisition by the Mark Zuckerberg-led conglomerate.
According to Arora, the founding team of WhatsApp had made three key demands about the future of the service at the time of the acquisition: No mining user data, No ads and no cross-platform tracking. Arora spoke about how the business model of WhatsApp was supposed to be a $1 annual fee for unlimited usage of the service. These demands were accepted at the time.
Arora claims that WhatsApp was heading in that direction until 2018 when he and co-founder Jan Koum had left WhatsApp. Brain Acton, another cofounder, had left WhatsApp in 2017, reportedly over strained ties with Zuckerberg. This was also around the time when the Cambridge Analytica scandal broke. In the tweets, Arora points out how Brian Acton had tweeted, “Delete Facebook,” at the time.
“Today, WhatsApp is Facebook’s second-largest platform (even bigger than Instagram or FB Messenger). But it’s a shadow of the product we poured our hearts into, and wanted to build for the world. And I am not the only one who regrets that it became part of Facebook when it did,” wrote Acton in one of the tweets.
“Tech companies need to admit when they have done wrong. Nobody knew in the beginning that Facebook would become a Frankenstein monster that devoured user data and spat out dirty money. We didn’t either,” added Arora.
Arora ended the Twitter thread with a link to a WSJ article about HalloApp, a company he founded, and how such apps founded by former WhatsApp and Facebook executives and how they are taking aim at legacy social media companies.
HalloApp in particular, is a social media platform for Android and iOS users that focuses on privacy and implements features like end-to-end encryption for chats and an ad-free approach. It also doesn’t feature elements like likes, followers and bots.