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Home / Technology / WhatsApp Flaw Exposes Billions of User Profiles

WhatsApp Flaw Exposes Billions of User Profiles

19 Nov, 2025

•

Summary

  • Researchers accessed 3.5 billion WhatsApp profiles via a contact discovery flaw.
  • Metadata, including phone numbers and locations, was harvested from exposed profiles.
  • WhatsApp states the issue is fixed, and no malicious actors exploited the vulnerability.
WhatsApp Flaw Exposes Billions of User Profiles

Cybersecurity experts have uncovered a significant vulnerability in WhatsApp, enabling access to approximately 3.5 billion user profiles. The flaw exploited the app's contact discovery mechanism, which normally helps users find contacts via phone numbers. Researchers found this mechanism had no limits on search requests, allowing them to query millions of phone numbers hourly.

This exploit provided access to metadata including phone numbers, location, device type, and account age, though message content remained encrypted due to end-to-end encryption. The researchers highlighted the risks associated with centralizing global messaging on a few platforms, noting that such metadata can pose privacy risks when aggregated.

Meta, WhatsApp's parent company, confirmed that the vulnerability has been addressed and mitigated. They stated that industry-leading anti-scraping systems were already in place and were confirmed effective by this study. The researchers have securely deleted the collected data, and Meta reported no evidence of malicious actors abusing this vector.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
It was a security flaw in WhatsApp's mechanism that allowed researchers to make unlimited requests, accessing metadata from 3.5 billion user profiles.
No, WhatsApp's end-to-end encryption was not compromised, meaning the content of your messages remained secure and private.
Yes, Meta confirmed that the issue has been addressed and mitigated, and no malicious actors have exploited this vulnerability.

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