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Everyone is warmly invited to a special book launch event: WhatsApp in the World: Disinformation, Encryption and Extreme Speech A global analysis of the vastly popular instant messaging service | Monday, September 1, Room 0.03 in building BG1, 14:00-16:00 pm
Event details of WhatsApp in the World: Disinformation, Encryption and Extreme Speech
Date
1 September 2025
Time
14:00

More info: https://nyupress.org/9781479833276/whatsapp-in-the-world/

Featuring the editors:

Sahana Udupa, Professor of Media Anthropology LMU Munich; Berkman Klein Fellow, Harvard University; Francqui Chair

and
Herman Wasserman, Professor and Chair Department of Journalism; Director: Centre for Information Integrity in Africa (CIIA)

The session involves a presentation of the book and open discussion.

From the publisher:

Known by the popular nickname “ZapZap” in Brazil and synonymous with the Internet across Africa and South Asia, WhatsApp has emerged as a major means of communication for millions of people around the world. Unlike social media platforms such as Twitter and Facebook, WhatsApp offers a closed, encrypted communication architecture that ostensibly limits the reach and exposure of shared content.

While recent scholarship has drawn attention to the risks it poses to democratic systems and marginalized communities, WhatsApp in the World is the first study to offer a systematic global view of an encrypted instant messaging service. Rather than taking the technical feature of “encryption” at face value, the volume proposes the conceptual framework of “lived encryptions” to highlight the different, often contradictory, formations around encrypted messaging, as evidenced in the way the promised confidentiality of encrypted messaging is upturned completely when surveilling states seize the phones from suspected dissenters to download the data, or how seemingly closed group communication is channelized to “broadcast” top-down political messages.

WhatsApp in the World features field-based and multidisciplinary research, including contributions from practitioners at leading fact-checking institutions on how encrypted instant messaging services play a critical role in shaping extreme speech and disinformation ecosystems in different regions of the world. From election manipulations in South Africa and Nigeria to Russian diaspora activism in Europe to WhatsApp use as an everyday infrastructure in Brazilian favelas and among nationalists in India, this volume demonstrates how many core features of WhatsApp—from disappearing messages and quick forwards to group chats and calls—allow for the amplification of disinformation and extreme speech. Highlighting complex political dynamics on the ground, it also introduces the significant methodological challenges of studying encrypted messaging services, providing critical pathways to address issues around ethical and technical issues of data protection, privacy, and confidentiality.