Whatsapp CEO set to leave Facebook
SANFRANCISCO: Whatsappceojan Koum is breaking ties with his company’s parent, Facebook, amid a privacy scandal that has dogged the social network for weeks.
Koum confirmed his departure from Whatsapp Monday on his Facebook page .
reported that Koum also plans to resign from Facebook’s board of directors. Facebook wouldn’t comment on that report.
Facebook has been trying to defuse questions about whether it can be trusted with the reams of personal information it collects to sell ads and whether its social network does more harm than good.
Koum didn’t elaborate on his reasons for leaving, other to say it was time to “move on” so he could spend more time “collecting rare air-cooled Porsches, working on my cars and playing ultimate frisbee.” But Koum also may have been embroiled in a rift with Facebook management over the parent company’s voracious appetite for personal information and Whatsapp’s dedication to user privacy, according to the
report.
Whatsapp runs no ads. Facebook’s enormous profits, meanwhile, are powered almost entirely by advertising targeted to its users’ interests.
Koum’s defection could put CEO Mark Zuckerberg in an uncomfortable position on Tuesday, when he takes the stage at a company conference. In attendance will be more than 5,000 app software developers, some of whom may be Whatsapp users.
Zuckerberg is already expected to reiterate some of the apologies he’s been offering in the wake of revelations that Facebook allowed Cambridge Analytica, a data mining firm tied to US President Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign, to obtain personal information from as many as 87 million of its users.
In a reply to Koum’s Facebook post, Zuckerberg told him he would miss working together.
“I’m grateful for everything you’ve done to help connect the world, and for everything you’ve taught me, including about encryption and its ability to take power from centralized systems and put it back in people’s hands,” Zuckerberg wrote.