The Citizen (Gauteng)

‘Your info is safe with WhatsApp’

CHAT APP: OUT TO STEM TIDE OF USERS JOINING RIVALS

- San Francisco

New terms spark criticism with threat to be cut from service if boxes aren’t ticked.

WhatsApp on Tuesday reassured users about privacy at the Facebook-owned messaging service as people flocked to rivals Telegram and Signal following a tweak to its terms.

There was “a lot of misinforma­tion” about an update to terms of service regarding an option to use WhatsApp to message businesses, Facebook executive Adam Mosseri, who heads Instagram, said in a tweet.

WhatsApp’s new terms sparked criticism, as users outside Europe who do not accept the new conditions before 8 February will be cut off from the messaging app.

“The policy update does not affect the privacy of your messages with friends or family in any way,” Mosseri said.

The update regards how merchants using WhatsApp to chat with customers can share data with Facebook, which could use the informatio­n for targeting ads, according to the social network.

“We can’t see your private messages or hear your calls, and neither can Facebook,” WhatsApp said in a blog post.

“We don’t keep logs of who everyone is messaging or calling. We can’t see your shared location and neither can Facebook.”

Location data along with message contents is encrypted endto-end, according to WhatsApp.

“We’re giving businesses the option to use secure hosting services from Facebook to manage WhatsApp chats with their customers, answer questions and send helpful informatio­n like purchase receipts,” WhatsApp said in the post.

“Whether you communicat­e with a business by phone, e-mail, or WhatsApp, it can see what you’re saying and may use that informatio­n for its own marketing purposes, which may include advertisin­g on Facebook.”

Encrypted messaging app Telegram has seen user ranks surge on the heels of the WhatsApp service terms announceme­nt, said its Russia-born founder Pavel Durov.

Durov, 36, said on his Telegram channel that the app had over 500 million monthly active users in the first weeks of January and “25 million new users joined Telegram in the last 72 hours alone”.

WhatsApp boasts more than two billion users.

“People no longer want to exchange their privacy for free services,” Durov said, without directly referring to the rival app.

Encrypted messaging app Signal has also seen a huge surge in demand, helped by a tweeted recommenda­tion by renowned SAborn entreprene­ur Elon Musk.

In India, WhatsApp’s biggest market with about 400 million users, the two apps gained about four million subscriber­s last week, financial daily Mint reported, citing data from research firm Sensor Tower. –

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