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WhatsApp’s latest feature makes it easier for you to bring new group chat members up to speed

You can now share up to 100 past messages when adding someone new to a WhatsApp group, helping them quickly catch up on ongoing conversations.

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WhatsApp Group Message History featured.
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WhatsApp is introducing a small but meaningful tweak to group chats, and it addresses a longstanding annoyance for anyone who has ever added a new member to an ongoing conversation.

Until now, new group chat members could only see messages sent after they were added, so they were dropped in with zero context. In busy family threads, office groups, or event planning chats, newcomers were often thrown into the middle of a conversation with no clue what had already been discussed. The usual workaround involved copying and pasting key messages or sending a string of screenshots to bring them up to speed.

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With its latest update, WhatsApp is tackling this issue with a new feature called Group Message History, first spotted in a beta release earlier this year. When adding someone to a group, users can now choose to share a portion of recent messages so the new participant can quickly catch up. Instead of manually summarizing everything, the chat itself can provide the necessary context. Shared messages appear directly in the conversation view, complete with timestamps and sender names.

Shared group chat history with safeguards

WhatsApp says Group Message History, like all other chats on the platform, remains end-to-end encrypted and is not shared automatically. The option to share recent messages shows up when adding a new participant, and users can choose to send as few as 25 or up to 100 messages. The app will notify all group members when past messages are shared to ensure transparency.

Group admins can also disable the feature to prevent other members from sharing message history, although they will always retain the option themselves when adding someone new. Group Message History is not a major overhaul, but it’s a welcome addition that solves a very common annoyance. For anyone managing large or fast-moving group chats, it could make a noticeable difference.

Pranob Mehrotra
Pranob is a seasoned tech journalist with over eight years of experience covering consumer technology. His work has been…
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