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India asks WhatsApp to hold ‘usernames’ rollout pending consultations, letter shows

By Thomson Reuters Jul 1, 2026 | 12:28 PM

By Rajesh Kr. Singh

July 1 (Reuters) – India on Wednesday directed Meta’s WhatsApp to explain within three days why regulatory action should not be initiated over its planned “usernames” ​feature and asked the company not to roll ‌out the feature in the country until consultations are complete, according to a government letter reviewed by Reuters.

Here are the details:

• In the letter, the ministry of information and technology said it had taken note of ‌WhatsApp’s ​announcement that it would introduce usernames, ⁠allowing users to initiate conversations ⁠without revealing their phone numbers.

• “We’ve announced the option for people to reserve their preferred username on WhatsApp,” a Meta spokesperson said, adding that the feature is not yet live ​and that the company has reserved usernames for public figures, government entities and verified Meta accounts to help prevent ⁠impersonation.

• The IT ministry said the ⁠feature could materially increase online fraud, phishing, digital ​arrest scams and impersonation attacks by allowing bad actors to ​contact victims without disclosing their phone numbers

• It also ‌expressed concern that usernames resembling those of individuals, financial institutions or government agencies could facilitate identity spoofing and impersonation

• The move comes days after Reuters reported that India had scrutinised Telegram ⁠over anonymity features that allow users to interact without revealing phone numbers

• In June, a home ministry report reviewed by Reuters said ⁠such privacy features ‌make identity detection difficult and raised concerns over ⁠the app’s use in cyber fraud and ​the ‌sharing of illegal content

• Telegram also lost a ​legal challenge ⁠last month against India’s temporary ban on the messaging platform, after the government argued in court that features including username-based interactions and concealed phone numbers created enforcement challenges

(Reporting by Rajesh Kr. Singh, Aditya Kalra and Aftab Ahmed; Writing by Surbhi Misra; Editing ​by Maju Samuel)