scorecard
  1. Home
  2. tech
  3. news
  4. MeWe adds 2.5 million users in one week amid WhatsApp-Facebook data sharing controversy

MeWe adds 2.5 million users in one week amid WhatsApp-Facebook data sharing controversy

MeWe adds 2.5 million users in one week amid WhatsApp-Facebook data sharing controversy
Tech1 min read
New Delhi, As people scout for new social media platforms in the wake of the latest WhatsApp-Facebook data sharing controversy, US-based social network MeWe has become the top downloaded social app in Google Play Store, adding more than 2.5 million new members in the last one week.

The 'Anti-Facebook' and privacy-first MeWe is touted to be the ad-free future of social networking.

Since its launch in 2016, the social network surged to nine million users in October last year.

The platform currently has 15.5 million users -- 50% of whom are outside of North America, reports ZDNet.

MeWe is now translated into 20 languages and is currently the top social app in Hong Kong.

According to the company, its membership spiked frequently as people sought a social network that respects their data.

MeWe has no ads, no targeting and no newsfeed manipulation.

MeWe began in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and its founder, Mark Weinstein, envisioned a social and chat app that would give people everywhere the most exciting and helpful sharing technology with privacy built into the design.

Weinstein relocated to Mountain View, California, and built the platform to go head-to-head with Facebook and restore decency, privacy, and respect for social media users.

The popularity of MeWe in Hong Kong has been attributed to the city's suspicion of any restraint on free speech, after the Chinese government imposed significant restrictions on the expression of dissent following the 2019–20 protests, including the Hong Kong national security law.


SEE ALSO:
Indigo Paints’ ₹1,000 crore IPO is a hit even before it opened⁠ for subscription— here’s why
Warburg Pincus-backed Home First Finance Company to launch ₹1,153 crore IPO on January 21
From climate action failure to monopoly in the tech world — the world needs to wake up to these global risks in 2021, says the World Economic Forum

READ MORE ARTICLES ON


Advertisement

Advertisement