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WhatsApp to Warn Users Before Starting Chats With New Phone Numbers

WhatsApp to Warn Users Before Starting Chats With New Phone Numbers

WhatsApp is rolling out a new security warning on both Android and iOS that appears before users even open a conversation with an unknown phone number.

WABetaInfo noted that the feature displays the country where the number is registered, whether it’s saved as a contact, and whether any groups are shared, prompting users to pause before engaging with potential scammers.

Unlike existing WhatsApp security features that activate mid-interaction, this warning intercepts suspicious contact attempts at the earliest possible stage. The moment a user tries to initiate a chat with a phone number they’ve never messaged before, WhatsApp checks the number against trust signals.

WhatsApp User Warning (Source: WABetaInfo)

If the number lacks familiarity indicators, a confirmation screen appears, asking users whether they genuinely trust the person they’re about to contact.

From that screen, users can either continue or cancel the chat. Crucially, the recipient receives no notification about the user’s decision — eliminating any awkward social pressure to proceed.

Back in August 2025, Meta publicly announced it was exploring new protections against messaging scams, and this feature marks the concrete delivery of that commitment.

Scammers have long exploited the “new number” trick precisely because it triggers no immediate suspicion. A message like “Hey, it’s me, I changed my number” doesn’t look alarming on the surface; nothing technically harmful has happened yet. That window of zero suspicion is exactly what bad actors rely on to move fast before a target has time to think critically.

By inserting a friction point before the chat opens, WhatsApp directly disrupts that psychological window. A country code mismatch alone is often enough to prompt a second thought, and that single moment of hesitation can be the difference between falling for a scam and avoiding it entirely.

WhatsApp already maintains a warning system against device-linking scams, where attackers manipulate victims into entering a code that links a scammer’s device to their account.

That existing system, however, only kicks in once a scam is already in motion. The new pre-chat warning is proactive; it has no connection to device linking and operates entirely at the contact-initiation phase.

What Users Should Do When the Warning Appears

If WhatsApp surfaces this warning, security best practices suggest:

Read the displayed details carefully, particularly the registered country of the phone number

Verify the contact’s identity through a separate channel, such as calling their previously known number

Consult a mutual contact if the person claims to be someone you know

Cancel the chat if anything feels off — it costs nothing, while proceeding could cost significantly more

This system is not foolproof. If a scammer’s number is already saved as a contact, whether accidentally or through social engineering, the warning may not trigger.

Conversely, legitimate contacts who simply switched phone numbers may also receive this flag. WhatsApp has not publicly detailed the exact algorithmic thresholds that trigger the warning, though cross-border number registration appears to be a primary signal.

The pre-chat trust warning is currently rolling out globally on iOS and Android. It represents one more meaningful layer in WhatsApp’s expanding anti-scam architecture, but as always, user judgment remains the final line of defense.

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The post WhatsApp to Warn Users Before Starting Chats With New Phone Numbers appeared first on Cyber Security News.

Source: cybersecuritynews.com –

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