BARCELONA, Spain (AP) â" WhatsApp, the  popular messaging service for smartphones thats  being acquired by Facebook, will soon be offering  a voice service.
  
  CEO Jan Koum said  the voice service will be deployed for Android and  iPhones this spring, with Blackberry and Microsoft  and Nokia phones coming later.
  
  "We  are going to introduce voice in WhatsApp in the  second quarter of this year," Koum said at the  Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain. "I  think we have the best voice product out there. We  use the least amount of bandwidth."
  
   WhatsApp currently has a voice function but only  in note form. This new service will be live.
   
  On Wednesday, Facebook agreed to buy  WhatsApp for $19 billion in a deal that is by far  the biggest by the social networking company and  any other done by Google, Microsoft or Apple.
  
  Wearing a gray shirt, jeans and a  black jacket, the 38-year-old Koum quipped - "last  week we added a new Facebook friend. I dont know  if you guys heard."
  
  The blockbuster  deal made serious waves with those in the  telecommunications industry who gathered this week  in the Catalan city, but also sparked concern  among users that Facebook would introduce  advertising to WhatsApp.
  
  Koum  insisted that there are no designs to add  "marketing" to the messaging service.
  
  "There are no planned changes," said Koum.  "Our vision and mission are aligned. We both want  to make the world more connected."
  
   Facebook is paying $12 billion in stock and $4  billion in cash for WhatsApp. Koum along with  fellow founder Brian Acton and their 55 employees  were also granted restricted stock worth $3  billion that will vest over four years after the  deal closes.
  
  Koum said that he  didnt expect that WhatsApps staff would grow in  number very much, saying that "we want to operate  as a startup."
  
  Relatively unknown  until now in the U.S., WhatsApp is popular in  other countries, both in Europe and in emerging  economies. The Mountain View, California, startup  already has almost twice as many users as the  better known short messaging service, Twitter.
  
  WhatsApp has 465 million monthly users  and 330 daily users, according to Koum. It is  ad-free and costs users 99 cents a year after a  first free year.
Thursday, April 16, 2015
WhatsApp to add voice to messaging service
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