{"id":405784,"date":"2025-09-21T18:00:24","date_gmt":"2025-09-21T12:30:24","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/how-whatsapp-is-becoming-the-gateway-to-a-billion-indians-crypto-news\/"},"modified":"2025-09-21T18:08:45","modified_gmt":"2025-09-21T12:38:45","slug":"how-whatsapp-is-becoming-the-gateway-to-a-billion-indians-crypto-news","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/how-whatsapp-is-becoming-the-gateway-to-a-billion-indians-crypto-news\/","title":{"rendered":"How WhatsApp is becoming the gateway to a billion Indians &#8211; Crypto News"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><\/p>\n<div id=\"paywall_11758449278183\">\n<p>      Yadav, already comfortable with UPI, scanned the code, which opened WhatsApp on his phone and presented him with a menu of options. Within minutes, he cleared his dues. Now with WhatsApp\u2019s voice features, he doesn\u2019t even bother with menus. He presses the green mic and says in Bundeli, \u201c<i>Bijli ka bill bharno hai.<\/i>&#8221; An AI bot powered by conversational-AI platform Gupshup replies with a payment link.<\/p>\n<p>      Elsewhere, a young mother in a Hindi-speaking town asks a WhatsApp bot what foods are safe during pregnancy. Puch.ai, a WhatsApp-first assistant now available on 9090909090 (one of India\u2019s most expensive numbers as the company spent a fortune to get it), responds in Hinglish with simple diet suggestions as a voice note.<\/p>\n<p>      For her, as for 60% of Puch\u2019s users, this is the very first time AI feels like part of daily life.<\/p>\n<p>      On another day, an Indian Administrative Service (IAS) aspirant asks Puch for current affairs updates, while a school admin asks for a customized poster for an event.<\/p>\n<p>      Similarly for India\u2019s unorganized workers, AI is creeping into their lives <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" class=\"backlink\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.livemint.com\/ai\/ai-children-child-healthcare-wadhwani-shishu-mapan-app-asha-workers-low-birth-weight-malnutrition-newborn-infant-growth-11751797326053.html\" data-vars-page-type=\"story\" data-vars-link-type=\"Manual\" data-vars-anchor-text=\"through welfare services\">through welfare services<\/a>. A daily-wage worker updating her e-Shram records, India\u2019s national database of unorganized workers that links them to social security benefits. She can now type in her local language in Microsoft\u2019s Jugalbandi bot on WhatsApp and within minutes, can update her details.<\/p>\n<p>      These cases may look fragmented at first. A mother here with a diet query, a farmer there finding the best fertilizers through chatbots or a worker elsewhere trying to find welfare schemes. But these strands are tied together by a single, larger narrative: WhatsApp wants to become India\u2019s gateway to AI.<\/p>\n<h2>The billion-user challenge<\/h2>\n<p>Let\u2019s look at this in reverse order. India has nearly 900 million internet users with a significant majority accessing the internet through their smartphones. Most of these users are outside metros and for them, the internet isn\u2019t a marketplace of apps. It\u2019s mostly a handful of familiar names, such as WhatsApp, YouTube, Facebook and Instagram. Reports show that nearly every user dips into content in her\/his native language, and that <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" class=\"backlink\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.livemint.com\/technology\/voice-ai-non-typing-internet-users-indiaai-mission-language-models-multilingual-voice-assistant-sarvam-gnani-chatgpt-11750067327087.html\" data-vars-page-type=\"story\" data-vars-link-type=\"Manual\" data-vars-anchor-text=\"voice as a medium\">voice as a medium<\/a> is also rising steadily.<\/p>\n<div class=\"embed\">\n<div style=\"min-height:525px; max-width:400px; margin:auto;\"><noscript><\/noscript><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<p>      This means that <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" class=\"backlink\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.livemint.com\/industry\/india-to-focus-on-voice-first-vernacular-llms-ai-mission-ceo-11754809432074.html\" data-vars-page-type=\"story\" data-vars-link-type=\"Manual\" data-vars-anchor-text=\"India\u2019s mass AI adoption\">India\u2019s mass AI adoption<\/a> is unlikely to be driven by downloads of Perplexity or ChatGPT. For India\u2019s tier I and affluent, English speaking crowd, AI may be a productivity hack or even a therapist; but for the India that resides in non-metros with smaller ticket sizes, and rural India, where the internet is synonymous with WhatsApp or YouTube, AI is likely to enter through the most convenient and intuitive touch points of voice, chat, cues and bots that answer everyday questions in their vernacular.<\/p>\n<div class=\"embed\">\n<div style=\"min-height:531px; max-width:400px; margin:auto;\"><noscript><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/datawrapper.dwcdn.net\/5pl8o\/full.png\" alt=\"Pecking order (Bar Chart)\"\/><\/noscript><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<p>      For these users, the easier gateway would be a chat window they already know and use\u2014the one where they exchange politically charged videos, send school notes, and forward endless \u201cgood morning&#8221; messages.<\/p>\n<p>      Acutely aware of the power of its ubiquitous presence in the market, WhatsApp is positioning itself as India\u2019s AI front door. At the centre of this momentum is Sandhya Devanathan, vice president of Meta (WhatsApp\u2019s parent) in India and Southeast Asia. Devanathan, who once navigated the highly cautious and risk-averse corridors of banking, is currently steering one of the fastest moving consumer technology transitions in India.<\/p>\n<p>      \u201cIf AI lives inside an app you already use every day, like WhatsApp, you don\u2019t need to download, subscribe or learn something new,&#8221; she says. \u201cYour usage begins right there.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>      Devanathan\u2019s instinct to make technology meet people where they already are is something she has carried across her career. She recalls her early years in the world of banking, where decision making could take months and products were shaped by regulators. At Meta, where she\u2019s spent nearly a decade, she had to learn to follow the exact opposite in terms of speed, experimentation and products that touched consumers directly.<\/p>\n<p>      She\u2019s now bringing those two instincts together: the caution of a banker and the urgency of a platform leader. It\u2019s a balance that now defines her role at Meta\u2019s WhatsApp. With India becoming a testbed for how a billion people might access AI and shape habits, Devanathan says WhatsApp has to feel fast and familiar enough to be useful, while also being reliable enough to handle the daily lives of hundreds of millions.<\/p>\n<p>WhatsApp\u2019s AI ambitions can\u2019t be built from glass towers. Last year, Devanathan took her team to a village outside Varanasi, where they watched a mother use Meta AI on WhatsApp to help her child with math homework.<\/p>\n<p>      \u201cIndia has done very, very well there,&#8221; Devanathan says of Meta AI\u2019s early adoption on WhatsApp. \u201cWhat\u2019s been fascinating is people in India don\u2019t always use it the way we imagined from the US. They treat it like a chat, asking questions in their own way. That\u2019s why it\u2019s so important <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" class=\"backlink\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.livemint.com\/companies\/meta-open-source-play-hindi-support-openai-google-facebook-big-tech-mark-zuckerberg-open-source-sarvam-ai-11721912972572.html\" data-vars-page-type=\"story\" data-vars-link-type=\"Manual\" data-vars-anchor-text=\"to build with local nuance\">to build with local nuance<\/a>.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>      The shift is visible not just in small and everyday interactions, but also in public services.<\/p>\n<p>      \u201cIn Andhra Pradesh, for example, 91% of exam hall tickets (admit cards students receive for board exams) were delivered on WhatsApp,&#8221; she notes. \u201cWhat started as a pilot for one metro has now scaled to millions of tickets a month across cities. These are the kinds of everyday conveniences where AI, layered on WhatsApp, can make a real difference.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>      To that end Devanathan stresses that WhatsApp\u2019s AI ambitions can\u2019t be built from glass towers. Last year, she took her team to a village outside Varanasi, where they watched a mother use Meta AI on WhatsApp to help her child with math homework, which she says was proof that India\u2019s AI future will be written not in code alone, but in small, everyday moments of need.<\/p>\n<h2>The first movers<\/h2>\n<p>To be fair, anticipating how first-time users are likely to tap AI is still a code to be cracked even by large tech giants Meta and Google. And while end consumers stumbling onto AI inside WhatsApp through chatbots and conversations feels almost accidental, it is businesses, and to some extent, even governments, that are consciously accelerating this shift.<\/p>\n<p>      Businesses benefit from a direct link to consumers without having to do it via an app, whereas government services can largely benefit from the scale that WhatsApp offers. These first movers are teaching Indians to treat WhatsApp not just as a chat app, but as a service desk.<\/p>\n<div class=\"embed\">\n<div style=\"min-height:887px; max-width:400px; margin:auto;\"><noscript><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/datawrapper.dwcdn.net\/89O2l\/full.png\" alt=\"How AI reaches Indians through WhatsApp (Table)\"\/><\/noscript><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<p>      For companies, the appeal is multifold. Conversations on WhatsApp convert far better than interactions on websites or apps.<\/p>\n<p>      \u201cThe difference is night and day,&#8221; says Ahshad Jussawala, CEO of conversational AI platform Haptik. \u201cWith standalone apps, there\u2019s friction\u2014downloads, logins, learning curves.&#8221; Haptik\u2019s AI assistants allow a user to do everything from booking a doctor\u2019s appointment to tracking an online order, all within a chat.<\/p>\n<p>      Jussawala notes that engagement rates on WhatsApp can be five to seven times higher because users don\u2019t have to download them or create logins.<\/p>\n<div class=\"cardHolder open psImageHolder psImageHolder2\">\n<figure id=\"inline-https:\/\/www.livemint.com\/lm-img\/img\/2025\/09\/21\/original\/Ahshad_Jussawala__1758450757290.png\">\n<div class=\"pos-rel\">\n\t\t\t<picture><source media=\"(max-width:399px)\"><img decoding=\"async\" id=\"11758450758052\" class=\"lozad storyEmbedImg\" src=\"https:\/\/www.livemint.com\/lm-img\/img\/2025\/09\/21\/original\/Ahshad_Jussawala__1758450757290.png\" alt=\"Ahshad Jussawala, CEO of Haptik. \" title=\"Ahshad Jussawala, CEO of Haptik. \"\/><br \/>\n\t\t\t\t <\/source><\/picture>\n<p>\n\t\t\t\t\t<span>View Full Image<\/span>\n\t\t\t\t<\/p>\n<\/p><\/div><figcaption class=\"psFigcaption psFigcaption2\">Ahshad Jussawala, CEO of Haptik.<br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<p>      Haptik\u2019s fastest adoption is coming from small and medium-sized business (SMBs) in sectors such as D2C retail, healthcare, education, and logistics. These businesses already use WhatsApp for customer updates but now want those chats to also convert into bookings, payments and lead qualification.<\/p>\n<p>      Jussawala says the next step is moving from FAQ bots to \u201cautonomous agents&#8221; that go beyond answering questions and can act to complete tasks such as booking tickets, completing transactions and resolving complaints end-to-end.<\/p>\n<p>      Government services are also among early adopters of the platform to bypass literacy and access barriers.<\/p>\n<p>      Gupshup\u2019s CitizenLink powers everything from electricity bill payments in Madhya Pradesh to complaint redressal helplines and election outreach campaigns.<\/p>\n<p>      During the pandemic, when call centres shut down, distribution companies turned to WhatsApp chatbots to keep billing and grievance redressal running. That experience has now expanded into UPI payments, ticket bookings and welfare applications.<\/p>\n<p>      Gupshup founder and CEO Beerud Sheth calls this a reversal of the old digital order.<\/p>\n<p>      \u201cInstead of expecting people to adapt to apps or websites, we bring the government to familiar channels,&#8221; says Sheth. \u201cWith Voice AI, a citizen in a remote village who isn\u2019t comfortable typing on a smartphone keyboard can simply speak in the local dialect and receive services instantly,&#8221; he says.<\/p>\n<p>      This means citizens can check electricity bills, file complaints or even register for a welfare scheme by speaking to WhatsApp in their local language.<\/p>\n<p>      Over the next two-three years, Sheth believes these interfaces will evolve from digital assistants to \u201ccivic companions&#8221; that are proactive systems and can anticipate and address citizen needs before they are even voiced.<\/p>\n<div class=\"cardHolder open psImageHolder psImageHolder2\">\n<figure id=\"inline-https:\/\/www.livemint.com\/lm-img\/img\/2025\/09\/21\/original\/Beerud_Sheth_1758450856608.jpg\">\n<div class=\"pos-rel\">\n\t\t\t<picture><source media=\"(max-width:399px)\"><img decoding=\"async\" id=\"11758450857542\" class=\"lozad storyEmbedImg\" src=\"https:\/\/www.livemint.com\/lm-img\/img\/2025\/09\/21\/original\/Beerud_Sheth_1758450856608.jpg\" alt=\"Beerud Sheth, Gupshup\u2019s founder and CEO. \" title=\"Beerud Sheth, Gupshup\u2019s founder and CEO. \"\/><br \/>\n\t\t\t\t <\/source><\/picture>\n<p>\n\t\t\t\t\t<span>View Full Image<\/span>\n\t\t\t\t<\/p>\n<\/p><\/div><figcaption class=\"psFigcaption psFigcaption2\">Beerud Sheth, Gupshup\u2019s founder and CEO.<br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<p>      For startups such as Puch.ai, WhatsApp has become the gateway to people meeting AI for the very first time, answering IAS prep questions, giving pregnancy diet tips or sharing transport updates.<\/p>\n<p>      Puch.ai CEO Siddharth Bhatia says the choice of WhatsApp was strategic. For young Indians in tier II and III towns, downloading and experimenting with ChatGPT is unlikely, but opening a WhatsApp thread is second nature.<\/p>\n<p>      \u201cAI reaches them in the same window where they already forward school notes and swap family memes,&#8221; he explains. This means users can get exam updates, personalised health suggestions or train status checks in the same platform where they chat with family.<\/p>\n<p>      Bhatia argues that this makes WhatsApp a habit-forming bridge\u2014what starts as curiosity in a chat thread can slowly build into a daily relationship with AI.<\/p>\n<p>      \u201cTo make people benefit from AI, you need to first make it exciting enough for people to try,&#8221; he says.<\/p>\n<p>      These moves, which demonstrate the varied ways Indians are interacting with AI, show how businesses, governments and <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" class=\"backlink\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.livemint.com\/ai\/ai-startup-zepto-razorpay-sarvam-ai-indiaai-mission-digi-yatra-peak-xv-kpmg-chatgpt-gen-ai-health-agri-robotics-cloud-11748503343627.html\" data-vars-page-type=\"story\" data-vars-link-type=\"Manual\" data-vars-anchor-text=\"startups are converging\">startups are converging<\/a>. They also make clear why WhatsApp has become the most practical bridge between technology and everyday life.<\/p>\n<p>      The problem is that this bridge can also become a bottleneck. As more services from bill payments to exam tickets to welfare schemes shift onto WhatsApp, India is anchoring critical citizen interactions to a platform it doesn\u2019t control.<\/p>\n<p>As more services from bill payments to exam tickets to welfare schemes shift onto WhatsApp, India is anchoring critical citizen interactions to a platform it doesn\u2019t control.<\/p>\n<p>      This dependency carries risks as policy changes in Menlo Park (Meta\u2019s headquarters) could ripple through Madhya Pradesh\u2019s electricity bills or Andhra Pradesh\u2019s exam halls. Given the geopolitical tension between the world\u2019s superpowers, with tech platforms at the centre of it, the question ringing across policy and tech corridors is: who ultimately decides how AI is delivered to hundreds of millions of Indians?<\/p>\n<h2>The sovereignty question<\/h2>\n<p>Puch\u2019s Bhatia admits that WhatsApp acts like both the rocket fuel and the restraint.<\/p>\n<p>      \u201cWe went forward with WhatsApp because, as a nation, we can\u2019t afford to wait to build the perfect interface, and WhatsApp serves as a nice bridge to introduce and get India accustomed to AI,&#8221; he says, adding that the company has built its backend to run independently if needed.<\/p>\n<p>      The ground reality, however, is very different. Every WhatsApp-first startup depends on Meta\u2019s Business API, whose economics have already shifted several times.<\/p>\n<p>      Such changes can directly affect the margins of startups piggybacking on WhatsApp. Startups such as Puch, Haptik and Gupshup are gaining access to millions of users through WhatsApp, which is installed in almost every Indian smartphone. But this kind of reach also comes with the fine print of dependency.<\/p>\n<div class=\"cardHolder open psImageHolder psImageHolder2\">\n<figure id=\"inline-https:\/\/images.livemint.com\/img\/2023\/03\/24\/original\/2-0-1190867379-WhatsApp-0_1679669501927.jpg\">\n<div class=\"pos-rel\">\n\t\t\t<picture><source media=\"(max-width:399px)\"><img decoding=\"async\" id=\"11758451222398\" class=\"lozad storyEmbedImg\" src=\"https:\/\/images.livemint.com\/img\/2023\/03\/24\/original\/2-0-1190867379-WhatsApp-0_1679669501927.jpg\" alt=\"Every WhatsApp-first startup depends on Meta\u2019s Business API, whose economics have already shifted several times. (Bloomberg)\" title=\"Every WhatsApp-first startup depends on Meta\u2019s Business API, whose economics have already shifted several times. (Bloomberg)\"\/><br \/>\n\t\t\t\t <\/source><\/picture>\n<p>\n\t\t\t\t\t<span>View Full Image<\/span>\n\t\t\t\t<\/p>\n<\/p><\/div><figcaption class=\"psFigcaption psFigcaption2\">Every WhatsApp-first startup depends on Meta\u2019s Business API, whose economics have already shifted several times. (Bloomberg)<br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<p>      \u201cDependency is a valid concern, but it\u2019s balanced by the reach and ubiquity of WhatsApp in India,&#8221; says Jussawala of Haptik, adding that for most small and medium businesses, WhatsApp is not just another channel\u2014it is the only channel.<\/p>\n<p>      At the same time, he acknowledges that the future won\u2019t be WhatsApp alone. He says that businesses are already exploring interoperability to include other chat surfaces, such as Google RCS, Instagram and UPI-linked interfaces.<\/p>\n<p>      In its defence, Meta prefers to portray WhatsApp not as a chokepoint but as an enabler. \u201cOur role is to give them the distribution arm that makes it very easy to use. We don\u2019t see a world in which one competes with the other. It\u2019s very complementary,&#8221; says Devanathan.<\/p>\n<p>      But public deployments also indicate how dependency risks can scale quickly.<\/p>\n<p>      While it means speed and ease for citizens as seen with Andhra Pradesh\u2019s pilot with exam hall tickets being sent on WhatsApp or Microsoft\u2019s Jugalbandi bot helping workers update their e-Shram records, for policymakers, it is also a question of total dependence on WhatsApp.<\/p>\n<p>      \u201cGovernments must design public services so that WhatsApp is one channel, not the only channel,&#8221; warns Apar Gupta, lawyer, digital rights advocate, and founder-director of the Internet Freedom Foundation (IFF), a nonprofit that fights for privacy, free speech, net neutrality and accountability in technology policy in India.<\/p>\n<p>Governments must design public services so that WhatsApp is one channel, not the only channel.<br \/>\n\u2014 Apar Gupta<\/p>\n<p>      \u201cIf citizen services exist \u2018only on WhatsApp\u2019, public services are ceding control over access, policy shifts, pricing, and product deprecations they do not govern,&#8221; says Gupta. He adds that services must be designed to be \u201cplatform-neutral&#8221;, backed by contractual guarantees of portability and auditability.<\/p>\n<p>      If WhatsApp is to become the doorway for AI access for millions of Indians, it also raises the question of how it would affect <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" class=\"backlink\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.livemint.com\/technology\/ai-sovereign-language-models-sarvam-soket-gnani-ganai-indiaai-mission-genai-deepseek-openai-google-gemini-llama-krutrim-11750153684247.html\" data-vars-page-type=\"story\" data-vars-link-type=\"Manual\" data-vars-anchor-text=\"India\u2019s sovereign AI efforts\">India\u2019s sovereign AI efforts<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>      Tanveer Hasan, executive director at the Centre for Internet and Society, is of the opinion that the balance can never be achieved practically. \u201cThe state has many other important responsibilities to deliver and cannot realistically match the pace of Big Tech\u2019s R&#038;D,&#8221; he says. \u201cThe sovereignty question is not always in building new technology, it is in making sure that for technologies with a public infrastructure element, the benefits for people are also hardcoded\u2014not just the ease of doing business or margins for the service provider,&#8221; he adds.<\/p>\n<p>      These perspectives, when put together, outline the paradox at the heart of WhatsApp\u2019s AI moment. For users it is the easiest way in; for startups it is the fastest way to scale, and for governments it is the path to digitization with the least friction. But as all three converge on this one app, India must decide whether accessibility today is worth the dependency it creates tomorrow.<\/p>\n<div class=\"keyTakeaways\">\n<p>\n      Key Takeaways\n    <\/p>\n<ul class=\"keyTakeawaysList\">\n<li class=\"keyTakeawaysItem\">For users outside India\u2019s urban centres, the easiest way to access AI would be through WhatsApp.<\/li>\n<li class=\"keyTakeawaysItem\">The app is already used to exchange messages, photos and videos.<\/li>\n<li class=\"keyTakeawaysItem\">Acutely aware of the power of its ubiquitous presence in the market, WhatsApp is positioning itself as India\u2019s gateway to the world of AI.<\/li>\n<li class=\"keyTakeawaysItem\">With services from bill payments to welfare schemes depending on WhatsApp, experts warn that India is anchoring critical citizen interactions to a platform it doesn\u2019t control.<\/li>\n<li class=\"keyTakeawaysItem\">Also, every WhatsApp-first startup depends on Meta\u2019s Business API, whose economics have already shifted several times.<\/li>\n<li class=\"keyTakeawaysItem\">Such changes can directly affect their margins.<\/li>\n<\/ul><\/div>\n<p>  <input type=\"hidden\" id=\"iframecount\" value=\"0\"\/>    <\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Yadav, already comfortable with UPI, scanned the code, which opened WhatsApp on his phone and presented him with a menu of options. Within minutes, he cleared his dues. Now with WhatsApp\u2019s voice features, he doesn\u2019t even bother with menus. He presses the green mic and says in Bundeli, \u201cBijli ka bill bharno hai.&#8221; An AI [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":405785,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[7],"tags":[25466,40869,15496,263,262,40875,260,40868,27645,259,258,40871,40874,40866,265,10470,40877,202,40872,40873,261,11692,40876,264,464,19758,40867,40870],"class_list":["post-405784","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-metaverse","tag-ai-adoption-in-india","tag-ai-for-rural-india","tag-ai-in-india","tag-axie-infinity","tag-axs","tag-conversational-ai-platform","tag-decentraland","tag-digital-india-whatsapp","tag-digital-literacy-india","tag-facebook","tag-game","tag-government-services-on-whatsapp","tag-gupshup-conversational-ai","tag-india-digital","tag-mark-zuckerberg","tag-meta-ai","tag-meta-india-strategy","tag-nft","tag-puch-ai","tag-puch-ai-whatsapp-number","tag-sandbox","tag-sandhya-devanathan","tag-upi-payments-whatsapp","tag-vr","tag-whatsapp","tag-whatsapp-ai","tag-whatsapp-ai-features-india","tag-whatsapp-for-businesses-india"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/405784","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=405784"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/405784\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":405786,"href":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/405784\/revisions\/405786"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/405785"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=405784"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=405784"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=405784"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}