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Case for controlling India’s digital future

Hindustan Times Chandigarh

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October 31, 2025

One tweet from Washington could silence a billion Indian voices. New Delhi needs to look beyond WhatsApp and Meta

- Vivek Wadhwa

If you think Donald Trump's tariff policies won't reach your phone, think again. The man who just imposed new levies on everything from electric cars to software could, with a single stroke of a pen, decide that WhatsApp messages from India count as “digital imports”.

If that happened, India’s business communications could grind to a halt overnight.

Meta, which owns WhatsApp, would comply immediately. Whether driven by regulation or diplomacy, the company would follow Washington's lead. Every Indian entrepreneur, trader, doctor, and government worker who relies on the app to coordinate would wake up locked out of their most essential tool. Deliveries would stall, vendors would disconnect, and customer service would freeze. The chaos would be instant and complete.

That is how dangerously dependent India has become on a single American corporation for its daily flow of information. WhatsApp has quietly become the backbone of Indian commerce. Millions of small businesses run on it. Hospitals, schools, and government offices use it for coordination. A disruption would ripple through every sector of the economy.

People talk about China's control of rare earths as a global risk. But Meta's control of India’s digital lifeline poses a deeper strategic threat. China's monopoly can slow a supply chain; Meta's can mute a nation’s voice. When a foreign company holds the keys to your country’s communication, sovereignty becomes a slogan.

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