You'll be able to reserve the username you want starting this week.
WhatsApp is launching usernames later this year, giving you an extra layer of privacy if you want a way to connect with a business or a new acquaintance without handing over your phone number. While the feature itself isn't available yet, WhatsApp is opening up username reservations this week. The Meta-owned messaging app says it's opening up reservations early because, with three billion users, it wants to give people the chance to pick the username they want.
To claim a username, go to Settings, Account and then Username. You can choose your own, and you'll be able to reserve it as long as it's unique, but you can also use the in-app generator. If you're reserving a username for an organization or a small business, or if you're a creator, WhatsApp will allow you to claim your Instagram or Facebook name. The reservations will roll out globally, and WhatsApp will send you a notification when it becomes available in your country.
When the feature itself becomes available in the coming months, other users and businesses will no longer see your phone number when you message them for the first time. If someone new wants to be able to contact you, they need to know your exact username. You can also set an optional key that other people will need to know, along with your username, before they can send you a message. During the reservation phase, you can set four digits as your username key, but it will be upgraded to an alphanumeric code when usernames go live.
With the launch of this feature, WhatsApp will be following in the footsteps of Signal. The privacy-focused app introduced usernames in 2024 to be able to hide your phone number from other users.
Starbucks is piloting a creator network on TikTok this summer, an effort to leverage baristas as brand ambassadors and utilize employee-led content as marketing. The initiative capitalizes on the high engagement rates of its staff who, according to Starbucks, post content three times more frequently than employees at similar-sized retailers. The company plans to compensate select "coffee creators" through an ad revenue-sharing model. Other brands leaning in and elevating internal influencers include office supply giant Staples, which has supported Kaeden Rowland, or the Staples Baddie.
Verizon announced a new joint venture with British rival BT on Monday. The telecom giants will unite their enterprise operations to serve customers in more than 180 countries. The venture is expected to bring in around $4 billion in combined annual revenue, and includes a $625 million equalization payment from Verizon to BT, with Verizon projecting a loss between $700 million and $800 million for its second quarter. BT CEO Allison Kirkby said the companies "could possibly look to bring in third parties at some point."
California announced an agreement with Anthropic to bring the company's AI platform, Claude, to state agencies and local governments. The pact will give the state a 50% discount on Claude access. "AI should not replace the human work of government; it should help our workers move faster, solve problems more effectively, and deliver better results for Californians," Governor Gavin Newsom said in a statement. The agreement comes as Anthropic remains in negotiations with the federal government over the rollout of its powerful Mythos 5 and Fable 5 models.
Mobile location data collected by companies such as Google and Apple does not have to be turned over to the government without a search warrant, according to a Supreme Court ruling Monday. Chatrie v. United States establishes that the Fourth Amendment does not allow law enforcement to use a broader geofence warrant to track devices in the vicinity of a crime scene. Individual cellphone users have "a reasonable expectation of privacy," the majority opinion says, and police need "probable cause" to request their location information.
Waymo has ceased its robotaxi partnership with Uber in Phoenix, marking the end of a nearly three-year collaboration, TechCrunch reports. Uber says it'll launch a new autonomous vehicle partnership in the city, while Waymo reintegrates its vehicles into its fleet, making them available through the Waymo app. The Phoenix market partnership was an "intentionally limited deployment" that allowed the companies to scale their offerings in Austin and Atlanta, Uber said. The shift comes as Waymo and Uber prepare to compete for robotaxi riders in new markets, including London.
Rocket Lab has agreed to buy satellite firm Iridium Communications in an $8 billion deal that could challenge the newly public SpaceX. Shares in both companies surged early Monday on the news. Rocket Lab — recently tapped by NASA for several upcoming launches — is looking to create a "competitive, vertically-integrated space company that designs, builds, launches, and operates its own constellations," it said. The deal comes just a couple of months after Amazon announced it would buy Globalstar in its own bid to take on SpaceX.
Comcast is splitting into two. The cable and internet giant announced on Monday that it will spin off NBCUniversal and Sky from its cable and technology divisions to form two publicly traded companies. Comcast shares jumped 9% intraday on the news. The new entertainment company will include theme parks, television, film studios, and the streaming Peacock service. Mike Cavanagh, Comcast's current co-CEO, will run the new NBCUniversal, while former CFO Michael Angelakis will take the helm at Comcast. The move should be completed in the next year.
