The Washington Post reported earlier that Mr Koum is exiting the company after clashing with Facebook over strategy. Bloomberg
The Washington Post reported earlier that Mr Koum is exiting the company after clashing with Facebook over strategy. Bloomberg

WhatsApp co-founder Jan Koum leaving Facebook



WhatsApp founder and CEO Jan Koum is leaving Facebook, just a few years after his messaging app was acquired by the social media giant for $19 billion.

Mr Koum posted his plan to depart on his Facebook page, saying the decision was emotional. His mobile-messaging tool, which has been kept separate from Facebook’s main social network, its Messenger app and other businesses, is known for offering end-to-end encryption, meaning only the sender and recipient can see the content of messages. The app has about 1.5bn users worldwide. The news received a quick response from Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg.

“I’m grateful for everything you’ve done to help connect the world, and for everything you’ve taught me, including about encryption and its ability to take power from centralised systems and put it back in people’s hands,” Mr Zuckerberg wrote. “Those values will always be at the heart of WhatsApp.”

The Washington Post reported earlier that Mr Koum is exiting the company after clashing with Facebook over strategy, and that he also plans to leave Facebook's board. The other co-founder of WhatsApp, Brian Acton, also left recently – and last month posted the #DeleteFacebook hashtag during the social network's scandal over user privacy.

When asked who would replace Mr Koum at the head of WhatsApp, or whether he planned to remain on Facebook’s board, the company said it had no comment. The company also declined to comment on whether Facebook planned to start advertising on WhatsApp — a business model the founders promised they would never use.

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4.35pm: Tilal Al Khalediah
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COMPANY PROFILE
Name: Kumulus Water
 
Started: 2021
 
Founders: Iheb Triki and Mohamed Ali Abid
 
Based: Tunisia 
 
Sector: Water technology 
 
Number of staff: 22 
 
Investment raised: $4 million 
How Alia's experiment will help humans get to Mars

Alia’s winning experiment examined how genes might change under the stresses caused by being in space, such as cosmic radiation and microgravity.

Her samples were placed in a machine on board the International Space Station. called a miniPCR thermal cycler, which can copy DNA multiple times.

After the samples were examined on return to Earth, scientists were able to successfully detect changes caused by being in space in the way DNA transmits instructions through proteins and other molecules in living organisms.

Although Alia’s samples were taken from nematode worms, the results have much bigger long term applications, especially for human space flight and long term missions, such as to Mars.

It also means that the first DNA experiments using human genomes can now be carried out on the ISS.