WhatsApp Was Extensively Abused During India Elections, Study Claims

The researchers joined several WhatsApp public groups and analysed messages posted on these platforms.

Advertisement
By Indo-Asian News Service | Updated: 28 September 2019 14:46 IST
Highlights
  • The study collected data from India, Brazil and Indonesia
  • WhatsApp's efforts were found to be ineffective at controlling fake news
  • Viral images were found to be in circulation for several months

WhatsApp failed to block the spread of misinformation campaigns through public groups

Despite WhatsApp's efforts to reduce the spread of fake news by limiting the number of forwards to five, the platform was extensively abused to spread unfounded rumours and create misinformation campaigns during recent elections in India and Brazil, a study has revealed. Facebook-owned WhatsApp particularly failed in blocking the propagation of misinformation campaigns through public groups, said the study conducted by researchers from Federal University of Minas Gerais in Brazil and Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the US.

In the study, the researchers wanted to find out how effective WhatsApp's efforts were in countering the spread of misinformation circulating on the platform.

Advertisement

They analysed the data around the election day, 60 days before and 15 after, in three countries -- India, Brazil and Indonesia.

"Our results suggest that the current efforts deployed by WhatsApp can offer significant delays on the information spread, but they are ineffective in blocking the propagation of misinformation campaigns through public groups when the content has a high viral nature," the authors wrote in a paper published on pre-print repository arXiv.org.

Advertisement

The research pointed out that WhatsApp allows the connection among like-minded individuals through chat groups which have a limit of 256 users and can be private or public.

While in the case of private groups, new members must be added by a member who assumes the role of group administrator, for public groups, the access is by invitation links that could be shared to anyone or be available on the Web.

Advertisement

As chat groups on WhatsApp are mostly private, harder to monitor than Facebook or Twitter discussions.

The researchers joined several WhatsApp public groups and analysed messages posted on these platforms.

Advertisement

Their analysis showed that while most of the images (80 per cent) last no more than two days, there are images in Brazil and in India that continued to appear even after two months of the first appearance.

And even if the 80 per cent images last no more than two days in WhatsApp that can be already enough to infect half of users in public groups, leaving 20 per cent of messages with a time span sufficient to be viral.

"Our results show that a content can spread quite fast through the network structure of public groups in WhatsApp, reaching later the private groups and individual users," the study said.

In the run up to the Lok Sabha elections, held in seven phases from April 11 to May 19, WhatsApp introduced several measures to prevent the spread of misinformation on its platform.

Besides limiting the number of messages one can forward at a time, the instant messaging platform also added a label that highlights when a user receives a message that has been forwarded to them. It also launched campaigns to educate people on the dangers of fake news.

According to WhatsApp, 9 in 10 messages on the platform are sent between two people and the average group has less than 10 people.

The company had said it will continue to look for ways to help address these challenges through its product and partnership with civil society.

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Further reading: WhatsApp
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Samsung Posts Record High Revenue in Q1 2026 Driven by AI Demand
  1. Amazon Now Expands to More Indian Cities With New Micro Warehouses
  2. Amazon Prime Day 2026 India Sale Set for July: Here’s What to Expect
  3. Bakkt Acquires DTR to Build Stablecoin Settlement Layer
  4. Samsung India Mobile Chief Raju Antony Pullan Steps Down; Aditya Babbar to Reportedly Lead MX Operations
  5. Oppo Reno 16, Reno 16 Pro Set to Launch Later This Month; Pre-Reservations Begin
  6. Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Successor Might Skip the 3x Telephoto Rear Camera, Early Leak Suggests
  7. Drift Exploit Claims Its First Victim as DeFi Protocol Carrot Shuts Down
  8. Realme 16T Geekbench Listing Suggests Possible Performance Downgrade Over Realme 15T
  9. Microsoft Rolls Out Xbox Mode on Windows 11 PCs in Select Markets
  10. OnePlus, Nothing and More Smartphone Makers Reportedly Raise Prices of Their Mid-Range, Flagship Handsets as RAM Shortage Rages On
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.