WhatsApp
has rolled out a massive new update that affects the way its Delete For
Everyone feature works.
The
new update will allow users to delete messages they publish to the app hours
after they first get sent.
The
Facebook-owned messaging app first added the ability to delete sent messages
from an individual conversation or group chat back in November 2017.
The
feature, which is already available on iOS, Android and Windows, replaces the
sent message with a note that states: "This message was deleted”, letting
other people know you sent something, but not necessarily letting them know
what.
It
is possible to delete a sent message your recipient has already read.
However,
for the feature to work correctly, every recipient in the chat, everyone needs
to be running the latest version of WhatsApp for Android, iPhone or Windows
Phone.
A
big new change has altered the way this feature works, though.
The newest update that's been rolled out to
WhatsApp upgrades the amount of time you're allowed to delete messages in.
Users
can now delete a message one hour eight minutes and 16 seconds after it was
sent - a significant upgrade from the previous seven minutes you were allowed
to delete the message before.
After
that deadline, WhatsApp users are only able to delete the message from their
own smartphone, which has no effect on your friends' or contacts' chats.
This
means that even if you delete the messages after this deadline, others will
still be able to see the messages.
Besides
the new time limit for deleted messages, the new version of WhatsApp also
includes myriad bug fixes.
We're
not entirely sure why it's such an oddly specific time, but we imagine there's
a logical reason behind it.
However,
at the moment this change is only being reported for the latest Android beta,
version 2.18.69 and not for iPhone users.
More
recently Tech website The Next Web reported a loophole within the app which
meant that the deleted messages will continue to appear in a conversation if it
has been quoted.
“We
noticed that quoted messages in group chats continue to show in quotes even
after they have been wiped," reported the site.
“Attempting
the same thing in a private chat bred the exact same results.”
"While
the original message will successfully disappear, the deleted text continues to
show in the recipient’s quote.
"WhatsApp
highlights in its FAQ that you can only delete messages for up to seven minutes
after they have been sent – as long as both the sender and the recipient are
using the latest version of the app. Curiously, it makes no mention how the
feature works in cases of quotes."
It's
possible that this is a bug, but equally, it might be a feature which WhatsApp
has failed to disclose.
Either
way, it's not the first flaw that's been found relating to WhatsApp's delete
for everyone feature.
According
to Spanish tech blog AndroidJefe, it's possible to read messages that have
already been deleted via the Notification Log on Android phones.
Alternatively,
it was also possible by downloading an app called Notification History.
The
Independent tested both methods at the time and found that while it was still
possible to view messages that have been deleted, you needed to have already
interacted with them.
"We
were able to read any deleted messages that we’d already read in WhatsApp, for
example, and any deleted messages that we’d swiped away when they first
appeared on-screen as notifications.
We
weren’t, however, able to recover any deleted messages that we hadn’t seen or
interacted with before they were deleted, which should come as a relief for
everyone.
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