Putin authorises creation of state messaging app to combat WhatsApp and Telegram
MOSCOW (Reuters) -Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday signed a law authorising the development of a state-backed messaging app integrated with government services, as Moscow strives to reduce its dependence on platforms like WhatsApp and Telegram.
Russia has long sought to establish what it calls digital sovereignty by promoting home-grown services. Its push to replace foreign tech platforms became more urgent as some Western companies pulled out of the Russian market following Moscow's February 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
Russian lawmakers say the state app will have functionality that the likes of Telegram and Meta Platforms' WhatsApp do not. Critics say the fact that Russia will exercise state control over it poses risks to privacy and personal freedoms.
Mikhail Klimarev, director of the Internet Protection Society, a Russian digital rights group, said earlier this month he expected Russia to slow the speeds of WhatsApp and Telegram to encourage people to switch over to the new app.
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New York Post
26 minutes ago
- New York Post
Trump calls out Putin as ‘misguided,' says US could send Ukraine Patriot missile systems
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27 minutes ago
Trump doesn't rule out sending Ukraine more Patriot missiles after Zelenskyy meeting
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Entrepreneur
38 minutes ago
- Entrepreneur
The Growth Driver You Can't Track But Can't Afford to Ignore
Learn how to harness the invisible force of dark social to build trust, momentum and serious startup buzz — no analytics required. Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. In the early days of building a startup, most founders obsess over metrics: website traffic, social engagement, ad conversions, CAC. Every dashboard becomes a compass, every click a signal. But here's the kicker: Some of your most important growth moments? You'll never see them coming — and you'll never be able to track them. That's because they're happening in what marketers call dark social: the invisible web of private messages, DMs, forwarded emails and group chats where people share your product, talk about your service and recommend you to their inner circles. It's the stuff that happens in the digital equivalent of whispers — and it can be more influential than anything you can buy with an ad budget. It's messy. It's unmeasurable. And it might just be the most powerful growth channel your startup has. Related: How Small Businesses Can Leverage Dark Social to Drive Word-of-Mouth Marketing What is dark social? Dark social refers to any online sharing that happens privately — outside the scope of traditional analytics. Think a friend texting a link to your site, a founder posting your blog in a private Slack group or a happy customer DM'ing your demo video to their boss. These referrals are happening in backchannels you don't have access to, and they're often far more trusted than a public review or paid ad. It doesn't show up in Google Analytics. It doesn't get captured in UTM parameters. But it drives real behavior — and real business. In fact, studies suggest that as much as 80% of all content sharing happens through dark social. If you're not paying attention to it, you're missing a massive part of the growth picture. Why founders struggle with it Startups are built on lean teams, short runways and the need to show results fast. Founders are taught to optimize for what's measurable and ignore what isn't. That makes sense … until it doesn't. Here's the blind spot: If you only invest in channels that give you clean data, you may overlook the messy, emotional conversations that are actually driving your brand's momentum. You may spend thousands optimizing an ad funnel while your most effective growth is happening in a WhatsApp group you don't even know exists. Here's the mindset shift: Just because you can't track it doesn't mean it's not working. In fact, some of your most powerful brand advocates are likely spreading the word behind the scenes — no strings attached, no attribution pixel required. Related: 4 Growth Hacks That Helped My Startup Increase Revenue And Profitability How to harness dark social — without measuring it You don't need to fight dark social. You need to fuel it. Here's how: 1. Create emotionally shareable content People don't forward pitch decks. They forward things that make them feel something — a short video that makes them laugh, a case study that surprises them or a meme that perfectly sums up a pain point. The emotional hook is what gets people to hit "send" in a group chat. Focus on emotional resonance: nostalgia, humor, inspiration or even frustration. Your job is to spark conversation, not just convey information. Bonus tip: Make all your content mobile-first, linkable and easy to share. If someone has to jump through hoops to forward your post, they won't. 2. Build for belonging Dark social doesn't thrive in isolation — it thrives in tight-knit communities. The more you build a brand around a shared identity, the more likely people are to bring others into the fold. This isn't about broadcasting; it's about bonding. You can encourage this by: Creating branded Slack or Discord channels Hosting intimate AMAs or roundtables for niche audiences Collaborating with micro-influencers who are trusted voices in specific communities When people feel like they're part of something, they naturally talk about it. That's dark social in action. 3. Make it exclusive (but shareable) Scarcity and exclusivity are catnip for dark social. People love being the one who's "in the know." Launch perks, limited drops or early access programs that feel personal — these are easy to share in a DM with a simple: "Thought you'd love this." Make it frictionless to share that access: "Invite a friend and both of you get a discount" "Use this code to unlock something special" "Here's a hidden page — don't share it publicly" You're giving people a reason to whisper about you and rewarding them for doing it. 4. Use tools to read the room (not the clicks) You can't measure every share, but you can sense the ripple effects. Social listening tools like Brandwatch, Sprout Social and Reddit keyword trackers can help you detect when people are talking about you — even if the original source is a private message. Newer AI-driven tools can surface emerging themes, tone shifts and frequently asked questions across forums and comment threads. If people are suddenly talking about your pricing or a recent feature, you'll know, and you can respond accordingly. Use these insights to: Guide your content strategy Improve your messaging Jump into the right conversations at the right time Related: Want to Know What Your Customers Really Think? Here's How to Implement a Successful Social Listening Strategy. Dark social isn't a problem to solve. It's a signal that you've built something worth sharing. You won't always see the referrals. You won't always know who clicked what. But if you deliver value, show up with authenticity and make your message easy to pass along, your audience will do the work for you. In the end, growth isn't just about attribution — it's about trust. And that's the one thing no dashboard can measure. So yes, track your clicks. Run your tests. Optimize your funnels. But also, make something worth talking about. Then sit back, and let the dark social magic do its thing.