The Union government’s directive asking Meta to pause the rollout of a username feature on WhatsApp reflects a necessary and timely intervention in India’s rapidly evolving digital ecosystem. While usernames may enhance privacy by reducing the need to share phone numbers, the concern that they could enable impersonation, phishing, and fraud is far from hypothetical. In a country already grappling with rising cybercrime—from “digital arrest” scams to identity theft—any feature that potentially lowers the barrier for bad actors must be carefully scrutinised before public deployment.
The government’s insistence on consultations and a detailed explanation signals a shift towards proactive digital governance rather than reactive enforcement. By invoking provisions under the IT Act and related rules, authorities are emphasising that innovation cannot come at the cost of user safety. Platforms like WhatsApp, with hundreds of millions of users in India, carry a heightened responsibility to anticipate misuse scenarios and build robust safeguards. Features that work in other markets may require recalibration in India’s unique threat landscape, where digital literacy gaps and scale amplify risks.
At the same time, this episode underlines the need for a balanced regulatory approach. Overregulation could stifle innovation and delay beneficial features, but underregulation risks exposing users to large-scale harm. The path forward lies in transparent collaboration between the government and technology companies—ensuring that new tools are not only functional, but also secure by design. If handled correctly, this pause could set a precedent for responsible tech rollouts that prioritise trust, safety, and accountability in India’s digital future.

