WhatsApp is trying to find a way to stop spam messages from being forwarded

Several WhatsApp sites have given screen caps of these communications, which don’t directly say the information is spam or fake news, but inform you that the content has been commonly shared. If you get one of these messages, you’ll see “Forwarded Many Times” under the sender’s name, and if you’re about to carry along one of these messages, you’ll see at the top of the first screen “A message you are sending has been forwarded many times.” A WhatsApp spokesperson refused to speak with News so it’s unclear where WhatsApp is currently testing this, or if it plans to complete it officially in the future.

WhatsApp chain information can be innocent, but they can also include any manner of scams. Some popular ones involve a message that urges users to pay in order to use the setting, one that touts way a non-existent service called WhatsApp Gold and added that tricks you into opening a certain-looking document that can download malware and steal your particular information.

WhatsApp also has a difficulty with fake news frequently being transmitted as well. These viral messages have had real-world outcomes, resulting in hysteria and mob attacks in India, and the use of doctored photographs and “social media warfare” to help get India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi into office.

Fighting spammy news and fake news across all social media platforms have frequently been a topic of debate. While organizations have, for the most part, been trying to tackle the problem, it hasn’t always been successful.

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