Sarahah App: What Is It, and How to Check Who Sent the Messages?
HIGHLIGHTS
- Sarahah is an anonymous messaging app
- You can send messages even without logging in
- There are concerns of cyberbullying in this anonymous setting
Sarahah app has been gaining ground since over the past week, joining trends such as Prisma app that rose quickly in public consciousness. Whether it will remain a hit or fade away in a few weeks is anybody's guess, but for now Sarahah app is something difficult to avoid seeing in your Facebook news feed. Of course, everyone is wondering how to find out who sent the Sarahah messages to them. If you have similar questions about the app, or are just wondering what makes it so popular on social media these days, we have all the answers you need below.
Sarahah app - how it works
The idea is simple - you create a Sarahah profile, which anyone can visit. Even without logging in, people can visit your profile and leave messages, anonymously. If they have logged in, messages are still anonymous by default, but users can choose to tag their identity. On the receivers app, all the incoming messages show up in an inbox, and you can flag messages, delete them, reply, or favourite them to find them easily later.
You would be surprised to learn that the Sarahah app is actually a few months old, and has already been a hit in regions such as Egypt and Saudi Arabia, according to a BBC report. But although the app has become very popular, it's quite polarising. For instance, although it has (at the time of writing) 10,305 5-star reviews on Google Play, it's also got 9,652 1-star reviews, showing a near 50-50 split in opinion. The creators described it by saying: Sarahah helps people self-develop by receiving constructive anonymous feedback.
That's at least in part because of fact that anonymity enables people to act out and behave in hurtful ways without consideration for consequences. Even positive reviews on the App Store still warn that this app is not for the weak hearted. Another 5-star review mentions that people are getting a lot of hateful comments.
Now, to be fair, the developers are also looking at ways to improve the experience. Privacy features mean that you can remove your profile from search results, limiting your audience to people who you share your profile with, and you can also turn off access for unauthorised users - that is, only people who are logged in will be able to comment. You can also block senders, so even if you can't see the name of the user, they won't be able to send you a message again.
The rest of the Sarahah experience remains incredibly barebones though. It's got one purpose in mind, and delivers a quick and ready experience on that front. It could look better, aesthetically speaking, but from a functional perspective its design easily serves its purpose.
Sarahah Exposer and Sarahah Spyer, do these work?
With the anonymity feature of Sarahah app masking the identity of the message sender from the recipient, there are several websites that claim to reveal the identities to the recipient. Chief among such websites are Sarahahexposer.com and Sarahahspyer.com, which have become popular courtesy WhatsApp forwards. However, these are just fake claims, and there is no way to decrypt the identities of Sarahah message senders yet.
Sarahah isn't the first anonymous messaging app we've seen that blew up in popularity though. Yik Yak, Secret, and Whisper are some of the popular apps in recent times to try and fill this function. For the most part, those apps have been more social, making the interactions more public. Sarahah's focus is more on messaging and less on social media, and so visiting another users' profile won't show anything, unless they choose to make the posts public.
Ultimately though, allowing fully anonymous comments, and not allowing users to respond to messages means that it's a possible avenue for bullying. It's very trendy right now, but we've seen other secrecy based platforms buzz up and then fizzle out too. There are certain key differences to Sarahah, but it's too soon to say whether it has what it takes to last longer than the others did.
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