WhatsApp
will no longer be supported on millions of older
iPhones
and
Android
devices starting Saturday,cotton/polyester blend sheets pros and cons the
-owned messaging app said in a blog post.
WhatsApp will be supported — or receive updates — on Android devices running
operating system
4.0.3 or newer systems, iPhones running iOS 9 or newer and select phones running KaiOS 2.5.1 or newer, including JioPhone and JioPhone 2, the app said in its
FAQ post
.
"Because we no longer actively develop for these operating systems, some features might stop functioning at any time," the post states.
FACEBOOK SUES ISRAELI COMPANY OVER WHATSAPP SPYWARE
Facebook did not respond to FOX Business by the time of publication.
When an app is not "supported" by its engineers, it is no longer updated with the bug and security fixes needed to ensure that all the app's features operate smoothly and hackers can't breach accounts. Cybersecurity
experts suggest
regularly updating apps and devices to ensure accounts are not hacked.
The decision is nothing new for the messaging app, which has stopped supporting older operating systems that don't offer the capabilities the app needs to work at its most functional level every year since it was created in 2009.
GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE
WHATSAPP CO-FOUNDER CALLS HIMSELF ‘SELLOUT’ FOR $22B FACEBOOK DEAL
If the app is currently active on Android versions 2.3.7 and older and iPhone versions 8 and older, users will be able to operate the app like normal, but they will no longer be able to create new WhatsApp accounts nor verify existing accounts. Additional operating issues may come at a later date.
Apple told
The Daily Mail
that only 7 percent of iPhone owners use iOS 12 or older, but did not specify how many people that percentage represents. If the world has an estimated
100 million
iPhone users, however, that means about 7 million people use iPhone versions older than iOS 12.
There will be no option for users to transfer conversations onto other apps, but users will be able to download and email conversations so they do not entirely disappear.
The decision by WhatsApp comes after two U.N. experts on Jan. 23
called for
an investigation by the U.S. into information they received suggesting
Amazon
founder
Jeff Bezos
opened a malware-containing video message on WhatsApp that appeared to come from Saudi Crown Prince
Mohammad Bin Salman
's personal account in 2018.
READ MORE ON FOX BUSINESS BY CLICKING HERE
Related Articles
A Sobering, Scary Question: Who Has Your Data?
Hackers Using Fake ‘Order Confirmation’ Emails to Hijack Computers
Why Your Passwords Should be at Least 24 Characters Long
View comments