Waterloo Region Record

Yahoo and Oath remove Canada-specific clause from terms of use

- DAVID PADDON

Yahoo’s parent company has dropped a controvers­ial new term of service that would have required its Canadian users to share data from their friends and contacts, including phone numbers, with the U.S.-based multinatio­nal group.

The Office of the Privacy Commission­er confirmed Tuesday that the company known as Oath, which owns Yahoo, Tumblr, AOL, Huffington Post and other businesses, had agreed to remove the clause following complaints.

People who used the Yahoo email service provided with their Rogers accounts were among the first to complain about the clause, which was within Oath’s recently revised terms of service.

Terms of service, in general, outline the legal obligation­s of the provider and the user. In the case of Oath there were sections specific to different countries and regions.

Rogers Communicat­ions Inc. issued a statement Tuesday saying it knows some customers had concerns about Yahoo’s clause related to personal contacts “so we are pleased it was removed.”

“We are working with our customers to address their questions and help them use Yahoo’s optout settings to customize their email preference­s,” the Torontobas­ed cable, internet, wireless and media company said in a statement.

The privacy commission­er’s office said Tuesday it has launched an investigat­ion involving Rogers, Yahoo and Oath.

A statement from Oath on Tuesday said that section of the terms of services “made clear to our users” that the consent was required “when they chose to have Yahoo Messenger invite their friends to the app.”

“Upon further review, we’ve removed this section of our terms of service as the functional­ity does not currently exist in our product offerings.”

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