Millennium Post

GERMANY FIRM BANS WHATSAPP

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FRANKFURT AM MAIN: German car parts supplier Continenta­l on Tuesday said it was banning the use of Whatsapp and Snapchat on workissued mobile phones "with immediate effect" because of data protection concerns.

The company said such social media apps had "deficienci­es" that made it difficult to comply with tough new EU data protection legislatio­n, especially their insistence on having access to a user's contact list.

"Continenta­l is prohibitin­g its employees from using social media apps like Whatsapp and Snapchat in its global company network, effective immediatel­y," the firm said in a statement.

Some 36,000 employees would be affected by the move, a Continenta­l spokesman said.

The company, one of the world's leading makers of car parts, has over 240,000 staff globally.

A key principle of the European Union's new general data protection regulation (GDPR), which came into force on May 25, is that individual­s must explicitly grant permission for their data to be used.

But Continenta­l said that by demanding full access to address books, Whatsapp for example had shifted the burden onto the user, essentiall­y expecting them to contact everyone in their phone to let them know their data was being shared.

"We think it is unacceptab­le to transfer to users the responsibi­lity of complying with data protection laws," said Continenta­l's CEO Elmar Degenhart.

The Hanover-based firm said it stood ready to reverse its decision once the service providers "change the basic settings to ensure that their apps comply with data-protection regulation­s by default".

The issue of how personal informatio­n is used and shared online was given fresh urgency after Facebook earlier this year admitted to a massive privacy breach that allowed a political consultanc­y linked to US President Donald Trump's 2016 campaign to harvest the data of up to 87 million users.

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