QR and companion messaging tools
Whats Web is built around WhatsApp Web-style companion use, where users may scan a QR code, open web-based messaging features, and keep related tools in one place. This can be convenient for people who manage messaging sessions across devices or need quick access to status and utility screens.
Treat every QR connection as account-sensitive. Only scan codes you initiated yourself, and disconnect sessions you no longer use from the main messaging account. Companion tools should never receive more access than the task actually requires.
Status and utility screens
The app presents a utility-style layout rather than a simple chat client. Users may find shortcuts for web sessions, status handling, cleaner-style tools, or media-related functions depending on the active screen and granted permissions.
Use these features carefully because messaging media can include private photos, voice notes, contact names, and conversation context. Keep saved files out of shared folders, and avoid letting the app manage private messaging content on a device used by multiple people.
This gives the section a clearer user value by connecting the main feature to a concrete mobile use case, session goal, or replay reason.
Camera, contacts, storage, and billing
The package declares camera, contacts, storage, microphone, overlay, billing, notifications, network, vibration, audio settings, wake-lock, and badge-related capabilities. These can support QR scanning, media handling, alerts, paid options, and floating or overlay tools.
Grant camera access only while scanning a trusted QR code. Contacts, storage, microphone, and overlay permissions deserve extra caution because they can touch sensitive messaging workflows. Review paid prompts and disable notifications if they are not needed.
This gives the section a clearer user value by connecting the main feature to a concrete mobile use case, session goal, or replay reason.