All someone has to do is send a long message containing 5,000 emojis via the web version of the app to someone's phone and the mobile app will crash and force itself to shut down.
There is only one way to continue to use the app - deleting the message history and then trying to re-open the conversation.
But this is where it takes a sinister twist. Bhuyan says this trick of crashing someone's app may be used by abusers or blackmailers to cover their digital tracks.
“Suppose an attacker have send an abusive message or is blackmailing a victim,” Bhuyan said in a blog post. “Now the victim cannot show the message as proof as once the victim receive the smiley […] the whole chat with the attacker would crash and the victim won’t be able to open it.
“The victim will have to delete the entire chat with the attacker in order to use WhatsApp normally.”