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FB acquires WatsApp

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Why You need to Stop using WhatsApp? But researchers found that WhatsApp is vulnerable to Man-in-theMiddle attack because the app has not enforced SSL pinning and hence user credentials can be easily stolen. SSL pinning prevents the user of the application from being a victim of an attack made by spoofing the SSL certificate. SSL pinning won't prove a great solution is not validated properly. "WhatsApp does not perform SSL pinning when establishing a trusted connection between the mobile applications and back-end web services. Without SSL pinning enforced, an attacker could man-in-the-middle the connection between the mobile applications and back-end web services. This would allow the attacker to sniff user credentials, session identifiers, or other sensitive information. " WhatsApp is allowing its backend servers to use weak 40-bit and 56-bit encryption schemes, which can be easily cracked using brute force attack. 'This is the kind of stuff the NSA would love,' researchers said.

WatsApp is down

Germans Switch To Threema For Privacy Reasons. Why did Facebook buy WhatsApp, and what it means for you? So Facebook has bought popular messaging app WhatsApp for $19bn. Why did Facebook buy Whatsapp? What does this mean for Facebook and Whatsapp? We explain what the deal means for users. For those interested in the numbers Facebook is paying WhatsApp $16bn which consists of $4bn in cash and $12bn in shares. There's also a further $3bn 'restricted stock units' which will be granted to WhatsApp's founders and employees that will vest over four years subsequent to closing. "WhatsApp is on a path to connect 1 billion people.

The services that reach that milestone are all incredibly valuable," said Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook founder and CEO. Why Facebook bought WhatsApp Facebook's official line on the matter is that "The acquisition supports Facebook and WhatsApp's shared mission to bring more connectivity and utility to the world by delivering core internet services efficiently and affordably.

What'sApp has gained 450 million users worldwide with 70 percent of them active on any one day. How Things Change. With WhatsApp, Facebook builds social infrastructure conglomerate. Messaging: Mobile's Killer App. Before the Internet, the nodes of communication were houses, and the killer app was the telephone. Presuming both you and I were in our respective houses, I could dial a number, and we could talk.

It was marvelous, and in retrospect, primitive; real-time is much less interesting, and much more limiting, when it’s the only means of communication. In the late 1970s, the computer came along, and while it made us incredibly more efficient, it didn’t truly alter the definition of communication. That took the world wide web, and its killer app: the browser. Now the nodes of communication were computers, and while real-time was still a possibility, it was passive communication that defined the web. Seven years ago, the computer became pocketable, but the original use cases were about making the passive presentation of information accessible not just at a time convenient to the viewer, but also at any place: the web was now everywhere.

All of these positive factors apply to messaging. Sequoia Capital — Four Numbers That Explain Why Facebook Acquired WhatsApp. Facebook. Almost five years ago we started WhatsApp with a simple mission: building a cool product used globally by everybody. Nothing else mattered to us. Today we are announcing a partnership with Facebook that will allow us to continue on that simple mission. Doing this will give WhatsApp the flexibility to grow and expand, while giving me, Brian, and the rest of our team more time to focus on building a communications service that’s as fast, affordable and personal as possible. Here’s what will change for you, our users: nothing. WhatsApp will remain autonomous and operate independently. You can continue to enjoy the service for a nominal fee. You can continue to use WhatsApp no matter where in the world you are, or what smartphone you’re using. Our team has always believed that neither cost and distance should ever prevent people from connecting with their friends and loved ones, and won’t rest until everyone, everywhere is empowered with that opportunity.

Facebook s'offre la messagerie WhatsApp pour 19 milliards de dollars. Facebook to Acquire WhatsApp. Acquisition accelerates Facebook’s ability to bring connectivity and utility to the worldLeading mobile messaging company will continue to operate independently and retain its brandWhatsApp co-founder and CEO Jan Koum to join Facebook Board of Directors MENLO PARK, CALIF. – February 19, 2014 – Facebook today announced that it has reached a definitive agreement to acquire WhatsApp, a rapidly growing cross-platform mobile messaging company, for a total of approximately $16 billion, including $4 billion in cash and approximately $12 billion worth of Facebook shares. The agreement also provides for an additional $3 billion in restricted stock units to be granted to WhatsApp’s founders and employees that will vest over four years subsequent to closing. WhatsApp has built a leading and rapidly growing real-time mobile messaging service, with: “WhatsApp is on a path to connect 1 billion people.

Webcast and Conference Call Information About Facebook About WhatsApp Facebook Contacts. Form8K_2192014. WhatsApp vendu 14 milliards : c’est 500 Zlatan, le budget de la Nasa... Quand vous entendez « WhatsApp a été vendu à Facebook 14 milliards de d’euros », vous sursautez intérieurement : « Wahou, tant que ça ? ». C’est vrai que « ça fait de l’argent » pour une boîte qui compte quelques dizaines d’employés, dont 32 ingénieurs.

Mais soyez honnête : à part si vous êtes membre du Siècle, vous ne savez pas trop ce que cela signifie, 14 milliards d’euros. Voici quelques exemples de ce que Facebook aurait pu acheter ou payer avec 19 milliards de dollars (ou 14 milliards d’euros). Mambo number fiiiiiive La Lamborghini Veneno Roadster (vrrraaoooooum !) Les dépenses annuelles de marketing de Samsung ; les taxes payées par l’industrie du tabac en France ; un tiers des dépenses publiques liées au tabac en France ; 361 Rafale (si on en vendait) ; 470 000 lingots d’or ; 500 Zlatan Ibrahimovic, soit, si on décidait de cloner le footballeur, 45 équipes de onze Zlatan. WhatsApp : Facebook sort ses milliards mais ne convainc pas.

Pour le dixième anniversaire de son entreprise, Mark Zuckerberg s’offre un très gros cadeau. Et prend un risque immense selon de nombreux observateurs. Ce mercredi soir, les sites anglo-saxons s’amusaient au jeu des comparaisons pour souligner la démesure de la somme (Rue89 l’a aussi fait, ici). Facebook a déboursé 19 milliards de dollars (contre 715 millions pour Instagram en 2012) pour acheter le service de messagerie instantanée, WhatsApp. Soit 76 000 voyages dans l’espace sur Virgin Galactic, s’amusait le site Techcrunch. Ou le budget de la Nasa. 19 milliards de dollars (14 milliards d’euros) découpés ainsi : 4 milliards en numéraire ; 12 milliards en actions Facebook ; 3 derniers milliards en actions WhatsApp pour les fondateurs et les salariés.

A côté de cet investissement, les derniers grosses opérations financières dans le secteur du high-tech semblent dérisoires. WhatsApp, un acteur séduisant et prometteur du marché « WhatsApp est en voie de connecter un milliard de personnes. WhatsApp racheté pour 16 milliards : quand Facebook et Twitter n'avaient pas embauché son fondateur... Le fondateur créera finalement WhatsApp la même année… C’est la plus grosse acquisition de son histoire. Après avoir échoué à s’offrir Snapchat malgré des propositions à plusieurs milliards de dollars, c’est finalement WhatsApp, l’application de messagerie instantanée, que Facebook va acquérir pour 16 milliards de dollars (11,6 milliards d’euros).

L’opération sera réalisée pour 4 milliards de dollars en liquide, les 12 milliards restant étant en actions. Les fondateurs et les actionnaires se verront verser 3 milliards supplémentaires en actions de négociation restreinte (c’est à dire qui ne peuvent être cédées que sous certaines conditions, ndlr), ce qui porte la transaction totale à 19,5 milliards de dollars. Mais le « grand gagnant » serait surtout le fonds Sequoia qui y avait investit 60 millions de dollars en 2011, selon le magazine Fortune. Sauf que, voilà, cela n’a pas toujours été le cas.

What's WhatsApp and Why Did Facebook Pay $16 Billion for It? Facebook just spent $16 billion to acquire WhatsApp, spending $4 billion in cash and $12 billion in Facebook stock (it'll also kick in another $3 billion of stock over the next four years for good measure). It's by far Facebook's biggest acquisition — 16 times larger than what the social network paid for Instagram.

If you live in North America, you may not have much experience with WhatsApp. It's fundamentally a text-messaging replacement app that lets you send messages to any of your contacts, as long as you know their phone number. Similar to BlackBerry Messenger and iMessage, the service lets users bypass their carrier's SMS (short message service, generally known as text messaging) and avoid any texting fees.

WhatsApp is one among many similar services, but it's by far the most popular, with 450 million active users. Chinese competitor WeChat claims 270 million active users, and Japan's Line recently passed 300 million registered accounts (though active users are a subset of that). Facebook Buying WhatsApp For $19B, Will Keep The Messaging Service Independent. Facebook is purchasing messaging giant WhatsApp for $16 billion in cash and stock, according to a regulatory filing. The deal is being cut for $12 billion in Facebook shares, $4 billion in cash and an additional $3 billion in RSUs for employee retention.

A termination fee is attached to the deal that would cost Facebook $1 billion in cash and $1 billion in shares if the deal fails to pass regulatory muster. Facebook has posted on its blog, detailing the reasoning behind the acquisition, as well. The post notes that WhatsApp will continue to operate independently and retain its brand. Facebook notes that WhatsApp has over 450 million MAUs, with 70 percent of those active each day. “WhatsApp is on a path to connect 1 billion people. “WhatsApp had every option in the world,” Zuckerberg continued in a post to his Facebook page, “so I’m thrilled that they chose to work with us. WhatsApp message volume growth is still accelerating.

In a post on the WhatsApp blog, Koum elaborates on that: WhatsApp deal - Facebook snaps up messaging service in their largest acquisition | Technology. Facebook announced the purchase of the mobile messaging service WhatsApp on Wednesday, in a $19bn deal that represents the social media company’s biggest acquisition yet. Mark Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook, described five-year-old WhatsApp as an “incredibly valuable” service that was well on its way to connecting 1 billion people around the world. The deal is a big bet for Facebook, which has until recently struggled to convince investors of its strategy for mobile. WhatsApp has more than 400m users around the world and claims it is adding more than 1 million new registered users a day.

It allows unlimited free text-messaging and picture sending between users and is among the world’s most downloaded mobile apps. Facebook’s successful bid comes after Google reportedly made a $1bn offer for the company last year. “WhatsApp is on a path to connect 1 billion people. Facebook is making the purchase in a mix of cash and stock. 10 key numbers $19bn - Price being paid by Facebook.