Monthly Archives: May 2012

‘Slow’ mobile internet speed sufficient for WhatsApp and Skype

WhatsAppen.com

A mobile internet speed of 1Mbps is sufficient for many popular applications, such as WhatsApp and Skype. That is the conclusion of the Dutch Consumers’ Association after doing research.

Telecom providers are offering several internet speeds. The test shows that the speed of mobile internet doesn’t matter for popular applications such as WhatsApp, Twitter, Wordfeud and Draw Something. Also for Spotify (music stream) and Skype, consumers hardly notice the difference between different speeds. Only when loading images larger than 7.5 MB and watching videos (e.g. YouTube), the difference in speed is noticeable. The test compared speeds of 1Mbps, 3.6 Mbps and 14.4 Mbps.

The Consumers’ Association advises consumers not to focus on the indicated internet speed, but on the network coverage. That has much more influence on the user experience.

Extra charge for WhatsApp prohibited in the Netherlands

WhatsAppen.com

The Dutch Senate approved a new Telecommunications law that requires telecomproviders to treat all internet services equally. They cannot favor their own services, nor block or charge extra for services like WhatsApp.

Last year, some of the Dutch mobile operators unveiled the plan to charge extra for data used by certain third-party apps, such as WhatsApp and Skype. Afterwards, departing CEO of Vodafone Jens Schulte-Bockum said this was a “stupid response” to the declining call and SMS revenue. With the new Telecommunications law, it’s also illegal.

On June 22 last year, the Dutch House of Representatives already added net neutrality provisions to the new Telecommunications law, but on Tuesday the law is also approved by the Senate.

The Netherlands is one of the first countries in the world with net neutrality regulated in the law.

WhatsApp outage

120000

WhatsApp users across the world had to face a server problem tonight (CET).

Users were not able to connect to the WhatsApp servers for several hours.

According to WhatsApp, the issues should be resolved now (22:30 CEST).

WhatsAppSniffer shows WhatsApp Wi-Fi security leak

whatsappsniffer

WhatsApp messages sent via Wi-Fi (Open, WEP, WPA/WPA2) may be intercepted by WhatsAppSniffer. “The application is designed to demonstrate that the security of WhatsApp’s communications is null”, the Spansih developer explains.

WhatsAppSniffer captures conversations, pictures, videos and coordinates which are sent or received by an iPhone, Nokia or Android phone on the same Wi-Fi network. Messages via BlackBerry can’t be read by the application, as they use their own servers and not the ones from WhatsApp. The application has not been tested with Windows Phones.

WhatsAppSniffer uses Tcpdump which reads all Wi-Fi networks and filters those with origin or destination WhatsApp’s servers.

WhatsApp does not comment on rumors or speculation. “We focus a lot on our users’ security and are investigating the matter”, WhatsApp commented to WhatsAppen.nl.