Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Whatsapp may be sharing your payments data with Facebook

- Shrutika Verma and Mihir Dalal shrutika.v@livemint.com

NEWDELHI/BENGALURU: Whatsapp, the newest entrant in India’s payments market, has said it may share customers’ payments data with its parent Facebook, at a time when Facebook is dealing with questions about how it uses customer data.

Based on the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) platform, Whatsapp launched payments on trial for some of its users in February. It is expected to introduce the service to all its users soon.

“We share informatio­n with third-party providers and services to help us operate and improve Payments... To send payment instructio­ns to PSPS (payment service providers), maintain your transactio­n history, provide customer support, and keep our Services safe and secure, including to detect, prevent, or otherwise address fraud, safety, security, abuse, or other misconduct, we share informatio­n we collect under this Payments Privacy Policy with thirdparty service providers including Facebook,” one of the clauses in Whatsapp’s privacy policy reads.

“To provide Payments to you, we share informatio­n with third- Whatsapp’s payments

states the app may share data with ‘third-party service providers including Facebook’

includes mobile phone number, registrati­on informatio­n, device identifier­s, payment amount

Whatsapp, which has over

in India, launched a trial of the payments feature in February

party services including PSPS, such as your mobile phone number, registrati­on informatio­n, device identifier­s, VPAS (virtual payments addresses), the sender’s UPI PIN, and payment amount,” it adds.

Facebook in India has over 200 million users and the firm last week informed the government that about 335 people’s data was compromise­d because of the Facebook data leak case.

Facebook chief executive officer (CEO) Mark Zuckerberg is testifying in the US Congress over the next 10 days about allegation­s that London-based data-mining and analytics company Cambridge Analytica inappropri­ately accessed data on Facebook users in the run-up to the elections in the United States.

According to a circular by the National Payments Council of India (NPCI), the body that oversees the UPI platform, the banks associated with third-party payment apps like Whatsapp and Phonepe need to get exclusive permission from NPCI before they share customer data.

To be sure, Whatsapp rivals Paytm and Flipkart-owned Phonepe, too, have privacy policies that state that these companies may share customer data.

 ??  ?? policy Data 200 mn users
policy Data 200 mn users

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