In January, WhatsApp introduced its controversial privacy policy change witha pop-up in the app. While the outrage made the company delay it for a few months,the updated policy is kicking in from May 15.

Many people have an issue with this move because it’ll lead to WhatsApp sharing data with other Facebook apps. This has led to many folks trying out new messaging software.

Telegram’s download growth in the same period was 98%, and the app recorded 161 million installs. This surge also helped the messenger crossthe mark of 500 million monthly active userson the platform.

This shouldn’t be a surprise, as Telegram has been adding new features left-and-right. This includes aWhatsApp chat importand a Clubhouse-stylelive-audio chat. On top of this, Telegram is scheduled to launchgroup video calls on the app this month.

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[Read:This WhatsApp auto-responder will tell your contacts you’ve changed messaging services]

While these two apps were the big winnersfrom WhatsApp’s policy change, other platforms with experimental protocols and authentication features such asMatrix-based Elementandno-phone signup app Sessionhave also thrived.

However, all this hasn’t stalled WhatsApp’s growth in a meaningful way. SensorTower’s data suggests that while the Facebook-owned app’s installs declined 43% year-on-year for the January-April period, it still managed to beat its rivals with 172.3 million downloads. That’s also a testament to WhatsApp’s scale as an app with more than2 billion monthlyactive users.

Facebook toldTechCrunchlast week that the majority of users have accepted the updated privacy policy, and the app continues to grow — though it didn’t share any numbers around it.

People might not move away from WhatsApp completely but the download growth of other apps suggests that they’re open to trying out new platforms, and probably use multiple apps to chat with different sets of folks.

Story byIvan Mehta

Ivan covers Big Tech, India, policy, AI, security, platforms, and apps for TNW. That’s one heck of a mixed bag. He likes to say “Bleh.“Ivan covers Big Tech, India, policy, AI, security, platforms, and apps for TNW. That’s one heck of a mixed bag. He likes to say “Bleh.”

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