WhatsApp Launches New Feature to Label Forwarded Messages

The WhatsApp app logo is seen on a smartphone in this picture illustration. (Reuters)
The WhatsApp app logo is seen on a smartphone in this picture illustration. (Reuters)
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WhatsApp Launches New Feature to Label Forwarded Messages

The WhatsApp app logo is seen on a smartphone in this picture illustration. (Reuters)
The WhatsApp app logo is seen on a smartphone in this picture illustration. (Reuters)

In an attempt to boost the transparency of the conversation, a new feature added by WhatsApp allows users to know if the message they received was sent by the sender himself or if other users just forwarded it.

The Facebook-owned social networking company said the app would show a clear sign next to the message that a user sent it back to other users after receiving it, according to the German news agency.

By distinguishing messages that have been forwarded, WhatsApp aims to make it easier for users to see whether the message was sent by the sender or someone else passed it.

To use this feature, the user needs to download and install the latest version of WhatsApp, either from the Play Store for Google’s Android devices or from the App Store for Apple’s iOS devices.

WhatsApp’s new update came amid intense criticism for facilitating the rapid spread of false reports on kidnaps in India.

The use of the forward feature has led to many extrajudicial killings in India.



Germans Worry their Beloved Kebab May Get More Pricy or Even Scarce

06 August 2025, Baden-Württemberg, Murr: Strikers stand in front of the Birtat factory. The NGG trade union is demanding a collective agreement for the employees of kebab skewer manufacturer Birtat. Photo: Markus Lenhardt/dpa
06 August 2025, Baden-Württemberg, Murr: Strikers stand in front of the Birtat factory. The NGG trade union is demanding a collective agreement for the employees of kebab skewer manufacturer Birtat. Photo: Markus Lenhardt/dpa
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Germans Worry their Beloved Kebab May Get More Pricy or Even Scarce

06 August 2025, Baden-Württemberg, Murr: Strikers stand in front of the Birtat factory. The NGG trade union is demanding a collective agreement for the employees of kebab skewer manufacturer Birtat. Photo: Markus Lenhardt/dpa
06 August 2025, Baden-Württemberg, Murr: Strikers stand in front of the Birtat factory. The NGG trade union is demanding a collective agreement for the employees of kebab skewer manufacturer Birtat. Photo: Markus Lenhardt/dpa

Germans are in kebab angst.

They worry that their most beloved street food option, the spicy, juicy kebab in a pita that can be found on every street corner across Germany, may get more expensive — or even worse, that the country may be sliding into a national kebab shortage.

Even if these fears may sound exaggerated at first, they aren't unfounded. Workers at one of Germany's biggest kebab factories are locked in a bitter and ongoing fight with their employer over wages and working conditions.

For weeks, workers at the Birtat Meat World SE factory in southwestern Germany have repeatedly stopped the production line by walking off their jobs in "warning strikes,” demanding wage increases of 375 euros ($434) per month.

Their current salaries vary widely, and haven't been disclosed. The Food, Beverages and Catering Union that represents them says that payment methods are nontransparent and workers are making vastly different salaries for the same kind of job, according to German news agency dpa.

Workers are also trying to organize a collective contract agreement for all employees with the help of the union.

Many workers are immigrants from Türkiye, Romania or Bulgaria, who spend long, tough workdays in the factory, which has near freezing temperatures to keep the raw meat fresh.

On Wednesday, many workers walked off their jobs again, waving flags in front of the factory's main gate, playing drums, whistling and shouting for higher salaries and unionized contracts, The Associated Press reported.

German media have reported that Birtat hasn't yielded to any of the demands so far. The company didn't immediately respond to requests for an interview.

Birtat, which is located in Murr, 30 kilometers (nearly 20 miles) north of Stuttgart, has been making kebab skewers for more than 30 years. The company says on its website that it makes skewers of ground beef, veal, chicken or turkey kebab that can weigh up to 120 kilograms (260 pounds).

The workers chop up the meat, marinate it and push chunks of the raw produce on long metal skewers. The meat is then shock-frozen and delivered to restaurants all over the country.

Birtat says it supplies thousands of kebab stands and fast food places and reaches more than 13 million consumers every month. Some restaurant owners worry that should the workers decide to go on a long-term strike, the Germans' favorite fast-food snack may indeed become more expensive or even scarce.

Germans already complain that the meaty snack, which used to be a cheap staple that sold for 2.50 euros about two decades ago, has become too expensive, with most places charging at least 7 euros ($8) or more.

Halil Duman was pondering the state of the kebab business as he was busy slicing off thin pieces of ground beef at Pergamon Döner, a small eatery at Berlin’s Friedrichstrasse train station where people were lining up for lunch.

“It's all getting more and more difficult," the 68-year-old Turkish immigrant said. "The produce is becoming more expensive and we barely make profit anymore.”

“But if we raise the prices any further, people won't buy here anymore,” said Duman, who has been working at kebab stores in the German capital for more than 30 years and was selling the classic kebab sandwich for 7.50 euros (around $8.70).

Germans have long fancied the kebab sandwich, which is called a döner in Germany. The word comes from the Turkish verb “donmek,” meaning to turn — the meat is grilled for hours on a spit and cut off in razor-thin slices when it's crisp and brown.

First brought to Berlin by Turkish immigrants in the 1970s, the grilled meat snack, which comes wrapped in pita bread with shredded lettuce, tomatoes, onions and different dressings, is now sold everywhere in Germany, from regions stretching from the Baltic Sea to the Bavarian Alps.

According to legend, it was Mahmut Aygun, a Turkish guest worker, who invented the first döner sandwich in 1971, when he sold the meat in a piece of pita bread with yogurt dressing at a stand close to a main train station next to the zoo in West Berlin.