Cheaters usually get caught and the mobile messaging service WhatsApp
can help or hurt those dirty little cheaters. WhatsApp has taken a
scandalous turn to aiding in infidelity, particularly in Italy. A new
report was released Monday by the Italian Association of Matrimonial Lawyers
citing that 40% of divorce cases in Italy have used WhatsApp as
evidence of infidelity. You’d think these people would just delete the
messages right away or use Snapchat instead. (Which is probably a better
way to message a mistress or mister since the messages disappear
immediately after you open them. Just sayin’.) WhatsApp helping push up
divorce rates shows how mobile can influence our communication and
relationships.
The appeal of WhatsApp is it uses 3G or WiFi instead of SMS texting.
So, if you’re into being sneaky and slutty with someone besides your
significant other, the phone number you’re messaging won’t show up on
the monthly phone bill. As Gian Ettore Gassani, president of the
association explained to The Times,
“Lovers can now exchange risqué photos of themselves, and we have seen
adulterers using the service to maintain three or four relationships –
it’s like dynamite.” Seriously, why are these people even married?
WhatsApp’s recently updated features tells users when their message has been sent, received and read with a timestamp. Which is great if you’re obsessed with knowing when someone has read your message. It’s also great for having it be used as evidence against you in a court case. “My message to adulterers is, ‘Be prudent’, since if it makes betrayal easier WhatsApp also makes it easier to be caught,” Gassani told The Times. “Spouses often become suspicious when they hear the beep of an incoming message.” That is quite the paradox advising cheaters to be prudes.
No comments:
Post a Comment