WhatsApp says Russia is trying to block it
FILE PHOTO: Whatsapp logo is seen in this illustration taken, August 22, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
MOSCOW - WhatsApp said Russia was trying to block its services because the social media messaging app owned by Meta Platforms offered people's right to secure communication, and vowed to continue trying to make encrypted services available in Russia.
Russia has started restricting some Telegram and WhatsApp calls, accusing the foreign-owned platforms of failing to share information with law enforcement in fraud and terrorism cases.
"WhatsApp is private, end-to-end encrypted, and defies government attempts to violate people's right to secure communication, which is why Russia is trying to block it from over 100 million Russian people," WhatsApp said in a statement.
"We will keep doing all we can to make end-to-end encrypted communication available to people everywhere, including in Russia." REUTERS

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
18 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Once seen as divisive, South Korea's new leader Lee tries the charming route
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox South Korean President Lee Jae-Myung during a 'people's appointment ceremony', which is the inauguration ceremony, at Gwanghwamun Square in Seoul, on Aug 15. SEOUL – When President Lee Jae Myung visited Sancheong, a county in southern South Korea where 14 people were killed in floods and landslides last month, he did something that his unpopular predecessor had refused to do: meet with victims after deadly disasters. 'I am sorry,' he said to villagers. 'No sir, it was nature at work,' one of them responded. 'Even the president couldn't have done anything.' Such small yet repeated episodes of the president interacting with people, captured by TV cameras, have resonated throughout South Korea since Mr Lee took office in early June. His appearance of being accessible and a listener, honed when he was a mayor and a provincial governor, is a tactic that is working well for him as president, too. It is a contrast with Yoon Suk Yeol, his conservative rival who was impeached and ousted after declaring martial law. Mr Lee's human touch has helped him launch his new administration with strong approval ratings, only weeks after an election in which many South Koreans expressed deep suspicions about him. When he was the opposition leader, he was blamed along with Yoon for South Korea's deep political polarisation, which had paralysed the government: Mr Lee was as confrontational toward Yoon as Yoon was dismissive of Mr Lee. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore 5 new walking trails allow hikers to explore heritage sites, win FairPrice, Cold Storage vouchers World Trump advises Ukraine's Zelensky to 'make a deal' with Russia after meeting Putin World Takeaways: Warm words contrast with cold reality of no deal at Trump-Putin summit Singapore Nowhere to run: Why Singapore needs to start protecting its coasts now Life Switching careers in middle age and beyond: How these Singapore professionals did it Asia 11,000 properties without power after 4.9-magnitude quake strikes near east coast of Australia Asia Move over, Labubu – Chiikawa is the new craze in Hong Kong Life English, physics, chemistry: These tutors take O-level exams every year As president, he has adopted a more approachable style in an effort to mend a country that he has said was on the verge of civil war. He pledged greater national unity when he took office, even as police and prosecutors went after his vanquished political enemies. But the real tests for Mr Lee lie ahead and have no near-term solutions. They include a rapidly aging population, a slowing economy and the rise of right-wing radicalism at home. Internationally, he must deal with a demanding US President Donald Trump and tensions with North Korea. Late in July, Mr Lee removed a cloud of uncertainty over the country's export-driven economy when his government struck a trade deal to reduce Mr Trump's tariffs on South Korean products to 15 per cent. In one survey, nearly 64 per cent of the respondents reacted positively to the deal. A different approach While in office, Yoon refused to meet families who had lost children in a Halloween 2022 crowd crush in Seoul that killed nearly 160 people, mostly young, which they blamed on government negligence. His bodyguards forcibly removed critics who shouted at him during public events. Yoon called the opposition-dominated National Assembly 'a den of criminals' and tried to silence them by military force during his short-lived imposition of martial law in December. Mr Lee has taken a more pragmatic approach with the public and with governance – even as special counsels appointed by him go after Yoon, his wife Kim Keon Hee, and their associates for criminal charges, including corruption. Yoon was already on trial on insurrection charges stemming from his martial law. Mr Lee had his first lunch as president with opposition leaders at the National Assembly, a stark departure from Yoon, who had repeatedly ignored calls for meetings from Mr Lee when their roles were reversed. 'We mix cement, gravel, sand and water to make concrete,' he said in July during his first presidential news conference, stressing the importance of cooperating with people with different political views. Mr Lee won the election with a little over 49 per cent of the vote. But in a testament to the political divide, Mr Kim Moon-soo, the candidate of Yoon's former party, won 41 per cent despite his relative obscurity. One survey showed that most of those who voted for Mr Kim did so not because they supported him, but because they did not want Mr Lee elected. Before he became president, Mr Lee had faced the prospect of several criminal trials, including on charges of violating election laws and inducing someone to commit perjury, which are now on hold with him in office. Conservative South Koreans feared that Mr Lee's progressive agenda would imperil the country's alliance with the United States. Mr Lee has said he wants to strengthen ties with Washington while restarting dialogue with North Korea and improving relations with China, a tricky balancing act. But since Mr Lee took office, some of his critics have begun mellowing toward him. Early in August, his approval ratings climbed to 65 per cent – a level of support Yoon never enjoyed. Empathy for workers So far, Lee's leadership has appealed the most to workers, whom he seems to empathize with the best. He used to be a teenage sweatshop worker before rising in politics. In July, he visited a company outside Seoul that had seen the deaths of three workers in industrial accidents at its bread-making factories since 2022. When he arrived, he encountered a picket line of workers holding signs that said: 'Mr. President, please help. We don't want to die while making bread.' Inside, Mr Lee, whose father and brother once worked in bread factories, launched a salvo of questions at the factory managers, forcing them to admit that many workers worked 12-hour night shifts for four straight days a week, from 7.30pm to 7.30am. Two of the fatal accidents happened early in the morning when workers were tired. The company later said it would stop its employees from working more than eight hours on a night shift. But Mr Lee offered no solution to the low wages that compelled the workers to work long hours in the first place, leading his critics to claim that he had more style than substance. Mr Lee learnt this week how fluid his approval rating could be when it dipped below 60 per cent. NYTIMES

Straits Times
18 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Trump says Putin agrees with him US should not have mail-in voting
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Donald Trump pose on a podium on the tarmac after they arrived to attend a meeting at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage, Alaska, U.S., August 15, 2025. Sputnik/Gavriil Grigorov/Pool via REUTERS WASHINGTON - U.S. President Donald Trump said on Friday his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin agrees with him that letting voters send in ballots by mail puts honest elections at risk. "Vladimir Putin, smart guy, said you can't have an honest election with mail-in voting," Trump told Fox News Channel's "Hannity" after a nearly three-hour meeting between the leaders in Alaska. "He said there's not a country in the world that uses it now." Trump, who promoted the false narrative that he, not Democrat Joe Biden, won the 2020 election, cited his agreement with Putin over absentee voting as he pressed his fellow Republicans to try harder to advance overhauls to the U.S. voting system that he has long sought. Trump has voted by mail in some previous elections and urged his supporters to do so in 2024. Putin, who has been Russia's president or prime minister since 1999, was elected to another term in office with 87% of the vote in a 2024 election that drew allegations of vote rigging from some independent polling observers, opposition voices and Western governments. The most formidable opposition leader, Alexei Navalny, died in an Arctic penal colony in 2024. Russia's embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to a request for comment on his conversation with Trump. The Russian president has previously said some U.S. elections were marred by fraudulent voting, without presenting evidence. The position mirrors Trump's false claims of widespread voter fraud following the 2020 election. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore 5 new walking trails allow hikers to explore heritage sites, win FairPrice, Cold Storage vouchers World Trump advises Ukraine's Zelensky to 'make a deal' with Russia after meeting Putin World Takeaways: Warm words contrast with cold reality of no deal at Trump-Putin summit Singapore Nowhere to run: Why Singapore needs to start protecting its coasts now Life Switching careers in middle age and beyond: How these Singapore professionals did it Asia 11,000 properties without power after 4.9-magnitude quake strikes near east coast of Australia Asia Move over, Labubu – Chiikawa is the new craze in Hong Kong Life English, physics, chemistry: These tutors take O-level exams every year Justice Department and Senate investigations found that Moscow tried to influence campaigns to help Trump win in the 2016 election. U.S. intelligence officials have said they believe Russia tried to do the same in 2020 elections and preferred Trump to win in 2024. Trump and some of his top aides long have asserted that he and his presidential campaigns were falsely accused of colluding with Russia, a claim he brought up again in Alaska on Friday. The U.S. intelligence community never reached such a conclusion. Trump, who has not ruled out seeking a third term in office despite a constitutional prohibition, on Friday showed impatience with Republicans for not prioritizing election reform legislation. "The Republicans want it, but not strongly enough," Trump said during the interview. "You can't have a great democracy with mail-in voting." Some Republicans, echoing Trump's claims, argue that changes like restricting absentee voting and requiring identification could reduce the risks of ballot tampering, impersonation or other forms of fraud that independent analysts say is rare. Nearly three dozen countries from Canada to Germany and South Korea allow some form of postal vote, though more than half of them place some restrictions on which voters qualify, according to the Sweden-based International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, an intergovernmental advocacy group. The Trump administration has stepped back from commenting on the fairness or integrity of elections conducted by many foreign countries in a significant departure from Washington's traditional approach of promoting democratic elections overseas. REUTERS

Straits Times
an hour ago
- Straits Times
Six-figure sales each durian season: Why durian sellers are now live selling on TikTok
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox SINGAPORE – When Mr Raay Lim started selling durians in May 2020 during the Covid-19 circuit breaker, he expected the long hours and physical toil, but not the non-stop yapping that would come to define his job now. Growing up, communication was never his strong suit. He had a habit of stammering and stuttering, so a career as a live streamer was the furthest thing from his mind. He went into the durian business to facilitate conversations, not lead them. 'I started out because my grandma loved durians a lot. Every durian season, we' d lay out the newspaper, sit and eat together. It's something I'll always remember. So, I hope that by starting my business, I'll be able to replicate these family moments for other people,' says the 32-year-old Singaporean owner of Zen Zu Fu Durians, which operates from a kerbside stall in Tiong Bahru. He set up shop firs t i n Queenstown, the n S in Ming and Bedok, and finall y T iong Bahru. But each successive neighbourhood proved no warmer than the last, with residents reluctant to leave their homes during the pandemic. 'It was very hard to build up a neighbourhood base. You need to give customers a reason to choose you over other more established stalls.' To a young newcomer like him, it was clear that the traditional model of business – a bricks-and-mortar stall, steady base of neighbourhood regulars – no longer cut it. The answer, then, lay online, on the one app that was taking over the world: TikTok. Live selling has helped Mr Lim reach new audiences. ST PHOTO: KELVIN CHNG In June 2023, Mr Lim logged on and started live selling durians for the first time. It turned out to be the right move. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore 5 new walking trails allow hikers to explore heritage sites, win FairPrice, Cold Storage vouchers World Trump advises Ukraine's Zelensky to 'make a deal' with Russia after meeting Putin World Takeaways: Warm words contrast with cold reality of no deal at Trump-Putin summit Singapore Nowhere to run: Why Singapore needs to start protecting its coasts now Life Switching careers in middle age and beyond: How these Singapore professionals did it Asia 11,000 properties without power after 4.9-magnitude quake strikes near east coast of Australia Asia Move over, Labubu – Chiikawa is the new craze in Hong Kong Life English, physics, chemistry: These tutors take O-level exams every year About 70 per cent of his revenue now comes from TikTok Shop, where mao shan wang is priced at $50 a 500g box – the same as de-husked durians at his physical stall. He estimates that he racks up six figures in total in TikTok Shop sales during the main durian season in June. The harvests in December and March yield more modest returns. Oth er enterprising thorn sellers started to do the same, lured b y t he platform's sprawling reach and quick commerce. Over the last year, the app has yielded a bumper cro p. T he number of durian sellers on TikTok Shop grew by some 40 per cent, while gross merchandise value surged 185 per cent year-on-year, according to the company. Sellers such as Mr Josiah Jeremy Seow of Golden Moments Durian Cafe in Bugis and Mr Tony Seah of Vlack Durian in Bukit Batok also tried to catch the wave over the last couple of year s. 'The era of business has changed, and we have to adapt and enter the streaming arena,' say s M r Seah, a 41-year-old Singaporean . H e launched Vlack in 2020 and started live selling in June 2024. The results were remarkable. By the following year, revenue had risen by 40 to 50 per cent. A 400g to 450g box of mao shan wang sells for around $60 on Vlack's TikTok Shop, 10 per cent more than at the physical store due to c harges such as platform fees. Because his store is in an industrial estate, online outreach is a necessity. 'We can't attract thousands of customers daily with just our physical store, but on TikTok, we can get thousands to learn about our brand.' Mr Tony Seah's shop, Vlack Durian, is located at an industrial space in Bukit Batok. ST PHOTO: DESMOND WEE For seasoned live streamers like Ms Emily Tan, who goes by @EmObsessed online, durians have also proven a risky – as perishable foods tend to be – but lucrative trade. She had heard that durians were one of the easiest things to sell online, with a higher eyeballs-to-sales conversion rate than other fruit. 'At first, I was like, are you serious? Who buys durians on TikTok? I thought you'd want to get a feel or try the durian. But after doing one live stream, I realised the cult of durians is real,' says the 32-year-old Singaporean of her first live stream with Zen Zu Fu in Ap ril. She usually touts family-centric products online such as Zappy wipes. S he sold a five-figure sum from four hours with Zen Zu Fu, slightly more than the mid-four-to-five figures she usually generates from selling other products online. Friends first Online, the prickly product cannot speak for itself. It demands a personable host: charismatic, knowledgeable and ready to talk for hour s. On Mr Lim's live stream s, conversation ranges far beyond durians, running the gamut from routine exchanges – 'How are you' and 'Have you eaten?' – to deeper concerns, like the rising cost of living and how to help friends with mental health issues. The sessions can run for up to six hours. Sometimes, he chops durians concurrently. But multitasking can be exhausting and dangerous, so he takes occasional breaks from physical work to e ngage his viewers. 'I would say it's 20 per cent selling, 80 per cent chatting,' he says, taking care to differentiate himself from sellers who urge customers to just 'buy, buy, buy'. 'To do business, you must first build your community. When people know your sincerity and who you are, they are more likely to buy from you. The way I approach the live streaming is by thinking that maybe we can be friends first.' Mr Lim believes in first building rapport with customers before selling them anything. ST PHOTO: KELVIN CHNG It seems to have worked. Viewers hang around for an average of two hours – for him, not the durians. Singaporean Ng Shu Huai, for example, has been following Zen Zu Fu's TikTok live sales for a year now. The 39-year-old, who works in the supply chain sector, tunes in every day after work and on weekend s . 'Raay's quite funny and the chats are always light-hearted, whic h helps me unwind after a long day,' she says. 'What keeps me coming back is Raay's honesty and sincerity. He never hard sells and remembers viewers' names, preferences and where they live.' On the other hand, she adds, buying in person can be quite intimidating. It is a sentiment Mr Lim says many millennial and Gen Z customers share, which is why he thinks TikTok has helped him reach a new demographic. 'Dur ian sellers can be intimidating in terms of their voices being loud. It's a bit hard to go down to their shop and speak to them because a lot of people can give into this kind of pressure.' On TikTok, however, the customer is king. Order a box if you like what you see. If not, just swipe past. Honesty is the best policy Ms Tan is not one to beg for business. Her style, she maintains, is transparent and honest, not pushy. She adds: 'If a customer says, 'Emily, I can't decide between red prawn and mao shan wang', some sellers will say, 'Buy both.' 'But I'll be like, 'Ask yourself if you want to eat something sweeter o r a bit bigger? And you can just purchase one. If it's good, next time, you can come back.'' Also emphasising candour, Mr Seow describes his style as educational. He starts by delving into the different types of durians an d th eir tastes in an engaging monologu e, sprinkled with facts and examples. For instance, he might explain why the price of durians is going up or break down what a bumper crop means for Singaporean buyers. 'When they know that we know our stuff, that's when we establish trust and rapport,' says the 36-year-old, who founded Golden Moments in 2017. Online, his durians are priced from $22 to $38 for each 400g box. Golden Moments Durian Cafe owner Josiah Jeremy Seow expanded his business to TikTok in 2023. ST PHOTO: BRIAN TEO The live streaming at Golden Moments runs from 1 to 10pm every day, with shifts divided into two- to three-hour long blocks hosted by in-house staff or a roster of about 20 freelancers it cycles through. Mr Seow is conscious of the difference between online consumers and those who patronise his physical store. Shoppers on TikTok are more price-conscious, as the platform allows them to compare the cost across various stores at once. 'They tend to be more critical about the brand and product because they can see how many boxes have been sold and what a store's rating is like before making a decision to buy,' he notes. In response, he has tightened customer service, ensuring tha t ch ats are replied to and deliveries made on time. The durians are usually delivered within 90 minutes, as promised on its TikTok page, affording quick gratification. Vlack's Mr Seah takes a similarly informative approach. He introduces himself, answers questions, discusses the season's forecast and guides viewers through the types of durians in a manne r that is 'very direct, very clear'. Trust, in his case, is built by keeping the camera trained on a box of golden flesh, with a member of his team de-husking durians in the background. 'We're a premium durian specialist, so we believe in flexing the quality of our durians, instead of attracting people by showing our faces,' he quips. Because TikTok Shop accounts for 70 per cent of Vlack's sales, the team live streams from 3 to 10pm d aily. Mr Seah admits that it can get tiring, even when live-selling duties are shared among his team of six. Does he ever run out of things to say? 'No, I love to eat durians. S o, I 'm doing what I like on a daily basis.' Thorny side of TikTok Not every part of the process is sweet, however. The rush hour, which is usually from 5 to 8pm and brings a surge of around 50 orders, always gives the team a bit of a headache – albeit a happy one. It has to manage expectations, keep track of deliveries, get durians to customers within two to three hours, as well as soothe the ruffled feathers of those asked to reschedule their deliveries, should stocks run out. And if any box fails to meet expectations, customers are urged to reach out to Vlack's service recovery team. 'Durians are so expensive. We don't want customers to eat lousy quality durians. Just reach out to us. Don't be afraid, we're very friendly,' he assures. The Vlack Durian team takes turns to live stream its durians on TikTok Shop. ST PHOTO: DESMOND WEE But refunds occasionally pose a challenge to Mr Seow. 'Some customers are a bit harder to deal with, they're obviously there to troll. So they will tell you that it's very bad, but when you ask for photos and videos, they don't want to send. Then how do you justify the refund ?' Sellers on TikTok Shop must respond to re fund requests within one working day, but can reject a request on grounds of lack of evidence or if the product is 'used, damaged or removed from the original packaging'. Then there is the emotional exhaustion of having to continually pump out good vibes. While Mr Lim can usually feed off the energy of 50 to 100 viewers, his live stream has its quieter moments too. 'The toughest thing is motivating yourself when there are no viewers,' he says. 'You have to talk with the same kind of energy, but honestly, it's hard because you know you're talking to a wall.' But he keeps going anyway, for the sake of his business and to push himself out of his comfort zone. As for his stutter? After hours upon hours of chatting into a phone camera, only a trace of it remains. 'If people want to laugh at my stutter, honestly, just let them laugh,' he says. 'Everyone has his or her own shortcomings. You just have to accept who you are and face it.'