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We will know your address now

WhatsApp will soon begin to share informatio­n with Facebook, angering a billion users in what is being seen as a breach of privacy

- — Los Angeles Times

When Facebook bought the start-up WhatsApp in 2014, Jan Koum, one of WhatsApp’s founders, declared that the deal would not affect the digital privacy of his mobile messaging service’s millions of users.

“We don’t know your birthday. We don’t know your home address,” Koum wrote in a blog post at the time. “None of that data has ever been collected and stored by WhatsApp, and we really have no plans to change that.”

Two years later, in a move that is rankling some of the company’s more than a billion users, WhatsApp will soon begin to share some member informatio­n with Facebook.

WhatsApp said on Thursday that it would start disclosing the phone numbers and analytics data of its users to Facebook. It will be the first time the messaging service has connected users’ accounts to the social network to share data, as Facebook tries to coordinate informatio­n across its collection of businesses.

And since then, it has come in for a barrage of criticism over the plan.

WhatsApp is changing its policy as it begins building a moneymakin­g business after long placing little emphasis on revenue. The company plans to allow businesses to contact customers directly through its platform. A similar strategy is already being tested on Facebook Messenger, a separate messaging service Facebook owns.

“We want to explore ways for you to communicat­e with businesses that matter to you too, while still giving you an experience without third-party banner ads and spam,” WhatsApp said in a blog post announcing the changes to its privacy policy.

Spam messages

Among the changes, Facebook will be able to use a person’s phone number to improve other Facebook-operated services, such as making new Facebook friend suggestion­s, or better-tailored advertisin­g, WhatsApp added. It said the data-sharing would also be used to fight spam text messages across its service.

WhatsApp emphasised that neither it nor Facebook would be able to read users’ encrypted messages and that individual phone numbers would not be given to advertiser­s. WhatsApp users are still required to provide a phone number only to sign up for the service, and can opt out of giving it to Facebook.

While WhatsApp operates autonomous­ly from Facebook, Koum sits on Facebook’s board.

The changes were immediatel­y viewed with a critical eye by some who were concerned when Facebook bought WhatsApp that their data could one day be misused. WhatsApp made early inroads with people worldwide partly for its hard-line stance on privacy and individual liberties, which was rooted in Koum’s youth in the 1980s in the Soviet Union, where, he has said, he lived in fear of his communicat­ions being monitored. Koum has also been outspoken against advertisin­g in the app in general.

Many WhatsApp users have appreciate­d just how different the service is from Facebook. In some countries, like Brazil, WhatsApp’s focus on privacy has led to criticism from law enforcemen­t agencies that they cannot gain access to users’ encrypted messages.

“Our values and our respect for your privacy continue to guide the decisions we make at WhatsApp,” Koum said in a post.

“It’s why we’ve rolled out end-to-end encryption, which means no one can read your messages other than the people you talk to. Not us, not Facebook, nor anyone else.”

He added: “Our focus is the same as it’s always been — giving you a fast, simple and reliable way to stay in touch with friends and loved ones around the world.”

Legal challenges

WhatsApp’s privacy policy overhaul raises concerns about potential legal challenges. Marc Rotenberg, president of the Electronic Privacy Informatio­n Centre, a privacy advocacy group in Washington, said it would file a complaint tomorrow with the Federal Trade Commission to stop WhatsApp from sharing users’ data with Facebook.

The group filed a similar case in 2014, citing promises that WhatsApp had made to protect individual­s’ privacy.

Facebook has also been at the heart of a debate over how people’s informatio­n held in Europe — the company’s users outside the United States are regulated from Dublin —

Facebook will be able to use a person’s phone number to improve other Facebook-operated services, such as making new Facebook friend suggestion­s, or advertisin­g.

should be transferre­d to the United States. In a legal case involving Facebook last year, Europe’s top court ruled that US privacy standards did not offer sufficient protection­s to the region’s citizens.

The court, the European Court of Justice, also invalidate­d the so-called safe harbour agreement that permitted technology giants and 4,000 other companies to routinely move data across the Atlantic.

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 ?? Bloomberg ?? Facebook, under the leadership of Mark Zuckerberg, its chief executive officer, is coordinati­ng informatio­n across its collection of businesses, including WhatsApp.
Bloomberg Facebook, under the leadership of Mark Zuckerberg, its chief executive officer, is coordinati­ng informatio­n across its collection of businesses, including WhatsApp.

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