If your instant message requires immediate attention, fine. But many don’t — they’re just inconsiderate.
Am I the only one still using email instead of WhatsApp? Perhaps so. I find it ever harder to persuade my contacts — and more vexingly, my friends — to use email for important messages instead of interrupting me with the ping of an instant message. And my failure to persuade others is a problem, because communication is a two-way street. Your choices affect my life, and sending instant messages that should have been emails is like snacking on chocolate bars and then expecting me to clear up the discarded wrappers.
Email is flawed, to be sure — many emails should have been a conversation. And if a message is either urgent or utterly disposable, then instant messaging is fine. But as a serious tool for important communication, email remains underrated.
First, it’s asynchronous. We don’t live in the 1990s any more, so email doesn’t beep for attention. The understanding is that if you send an email I will respond at a time that is convenient to me. Instant messages ping because — well, instant, right? And while I could switch off the needy noises from text or WhatsApp or almost anything, that would mean stripping the technology of a genuine use case in order to deflect some of the annoyance of people misusing it.
Second, email contains its own written record. You can check back, remind yourself of details and read old attachments. It is easy to file or to tag. Admittedly, some instant-message platforms have a way to search for old messages — if you can remember which platform they were sent on. But as a retrievable record of communication it’s hard to beat email.
(Reasons one and two explain why my wife and I will often send emails to each other across the room. It’s not sociopathy; sometimes it’s useful to provide notes and links for something we need to discuss, and it’s always considerate not to interrupt someone who is busy.)
Third, my computer has a keyboard and my phone doesn’t. Yes, I could install WhatsApp on a personal computer, but even if WhatsApp was well reviewed on Windows (it isn’t), I wouldn’t want to. It would be just another source of interruptions.
Fourth, it’s easy to organise email visually. When I check my email, I see four folders: an inbox, a “to do” list, a “to read” list and a “waiting for” list. When I check WhatsApp, I mostly see emojis. I am told that Snapchat is even worse.
Fifth, it’s much easier to customise the way email works — you can schedule future messages and set up filters, auto-replies and templates with chunks of text you regularly need to use. You can turn emails into calendar appointments with a click or two. Some instant-messaging apps offer some of this functionality, but all of it is commonplace on email, most of it for decades.
Finally, there is the enshittification problem: many instant-messaging platforms have an owner with market power and an ever-present temptation to degrade the user experience in pursuit of profit. If you don’t like WhatsApp and would rather use Signal, you need to persuade your friends to embrace the new platform. This co-ordination problem gives WhatsApp’s owner Meta considerable leeway to make your life worse before you get round to leaving.
In contrast, nobody owns email: it’s an open standard. You may be relying on Big Tech to provide your Outlook or Gmail account, but you can switch easily if you don’t like it any more. Nothing stops you sending messages from one email provider to another, so when you switch you don’t need to persuade your friends to switch with you. This power of exit is easy to take for granted — until you need it.
Of course, there are sometimes good reasons to use instant-messaging platforms. Their encryption is usually better than email; they handle photographs better; they can be fun for quick, disposable sharing of jokes or co-ordinating where to meet for a drink.
But that’s not why so many people are sending texts that should have been emails. The attraction of instant messaging is selfish. Messages are designed to interrupt the person to whom they are sent. HEY, STOP! LOOK AT THIS!
If your message demands that sort of immediate attention, fine. That is why they call it “instant”. But many instant messages don’t — they’re just inconsiderate interruptions. And because instant-messaging apps don’t have a proper inbox, they’re inconsiderate interruptions that can easily slip out of sight.
When the message is important but not urgent (that is, when the message should have been an email), then you’re implicitly requiring the recipient to set aside their priorities immediately to respond to yours — at the very least, making a note to themselves to deal with your interruption later.
Cory Doctorow — the author of Enshittification and an email power user, captured how this feels in a recent essay: “getting an IM mid-flow is like someone walking up to a juggler who’s working on a live chainsaw, a bowling ball and a machete, and tossing him a watermelon while shouting, ‘Hey, catch this!’”
I find this watermelon toss infuriating. Life presents us with enough incoming watermelons already; we don’t need people throwing them at us out of simple thoughtlessness.
In examining my own rage, I think I’ve come to understand why I find this behaviour so upsetting. I object to being dragged into a mess of other people’s making. The digital world is full of what are euphemistically termed “walled gardens”, a term which conjures an image of a sheltered oasis, but in reality means a cross between a doggy toilet and a prison camp. That would be fine if I could stay outside on the open internet, but my friends and colleagues keep insisting that they’re having a picnic in the garden and they would be so delighted if I’d show up.
Whenever I receive an instant message that should have been an email, I assume the worst: the person who sent it did so because they lost control of their email. Their inbox is overflowing; the searchable, fileable history of communications is no longer an asset but a guilty burden; they don’t trust themselves to reliably deal with an email, and so they don’t trust me either.
In other words, their email game is so weak that they might as well be flinging WhatsApps. And that drags me into their chaotic, goldfish-memory world.
Did I say that all these instant messages were like asking me to pick up your discarded chocolate wrappers? Let me change the simile. Your instant messages are like you eating the cheeseburger, while I have the heart attack.



A. WhatsApp was not created by Facebook, it was created by an independent company that got bought out after everyone started using it. (400 million users in 2013, facebook acquisition in 2014)
B. WhatsApp was created in 2009. Signal was created in 2011.
Meta using the name of a formerly independent company for their current pseudo-private messaging app does not mean said app meaningfully predates the one whose tech they use.
https://signal.org/blog/whatsapp-complete/
(Please share if you have a link arguing the opposite.)
More importantly, the encryption in Whatsapp is closer to HTTPS than it is to PGP. It keeps anyone except Meta or the recipients from keeping a record of what you say, but you should absolutely assume Meta is recording what you say on WhatsApp.
(And you should also assume anyone you talk to is keeping a record as well.)
Whatsapp still predates signal, they just migrated the network across. And your own link confirms that.
Also, whatsapp, by your own link is e2e encrypted using the signal protocol. That does not make it “like https”. Whatsapp could snoop your messages off your device, but they cannot read them as they pass over their server.
You are assuming good behavior on the part of a corporate giant grown out of a social media site literally founded to spy on its users. A company who is literally being sued for their claims that their chat app is meaningfully encrypted
https://indianexpress.com/article/explained/explained-law/whatsapp-lawsuit-encrypted-messages-10504837/
Even if Meta isn’t currently including themselves as a hidden participant in every WhatsApp chat, you should assume that they can do so and act as if they will do so.
Odds are pretty good that their encryption usage is good enough for any lawful behavior you may engage in, but you shouldn’t trust Meta or any software they provide with anything that would destroy your life if it was revealed.
Them including themselves as a participant still does not make it “like https”.
Being sued also doesn’t mean anything, anyone can be sued at any time, and there does not need to be a basis in reality for it to go ahead. It is not proof of anything.
They control the app, they can obviously steal the messages if they wanted to, but you are making very strong claims with zero evidence.
I don’t like meta any more than you do, but if you are going to make claims of “like https”, bring actual evidence.
If you don’t like meta any more than I do, why are you arguing so strongly that they deserve the benefit of the doubt?
And, more interestingly, what precisely do you mean that Meta including themselves as a recipient in every WhatsApp chat would not render their E2E encryption equivalent to HTTPS?
AFAIK both are in-transit encryption that prevents casual monitoring by other entries along the network path between you and the person you’re chatting with, but expose you to undetectable monitoring on the part of the service provider.
Just because they are a distasteful company, doesn’t give us free reign to spread lies about them. There is plenty of verifiable true things to say.
The signal protocol and encryption explicitly prevents the transit server decrypting messages. That a theoretical hidden third person (who may or may not be part of meta) in the chat doesn’t change that is e2e encrypted.
Simplifying it down to "they might have a hidden back-door, therefore it’s https is a dishonest framing in my opinion.
To be pedantic, I’m spreading alarmist rumors at worst. In English a “lie” has to be something the speaker doesn’t actually believe. And I honestly believe that users of WhatsApp should assume that Meta can read their messages.
You’re splitting a hair that’s not even worth curling.
If I ship you a locked box via courier, and the courier can get a copy of the key without talking to either of us, we should presume that the courier may have looked inside and take appropriate measures. Like, inventorying the contents of said box before and after, and not shipping things we don’t want the courier to know about.
It doesn’t matter if the courier keeps the box locks, doesn’t habitually carry a key, or even promises that they won’t get a key. We don’t even have to assume that they actually looked in the box, or use a slower or more-expensive courier.
If there’s a plausible way they can open the box, we should start with the presumption that they did and then go from there.