Khaleej Times

EU warns WhatsApp, Yahoo on privacy

- Julia Fioretti Reuters

brussels — European privacy watchdogs warned WhatsApp over sharing user informatio­n with parent company Facebook, and cautioned Yahoo over a 2014 data breach and scanning of customer emails for US intelligen­ce purposes.

The popular messaging service’s recent change in privacy policy to start sharing users’ phone numbers with Facebook — the first policy change since WhatsApp was acquired by Facebook in 2014 — has attracted regulatory scrutiny in Europe.

The Italian antitrust watchdog on Friday also announced a separate probe into whether WhatsApp obliged users to agree to sharing personal data with Facebook.

The European Union’s 28 data protection authoritie­s said in a statement they had requested WhatsApp stop sharing users’ data with Facebook until the “appropriat­e legal protection­s could be assured” to avoid falling foul of EU data protection law.

WhatsApp’s new privacy policy involves the sharing of informatio­n with Facebook for purposes that were not included in the terms of service when users signed up, raising questions about the validity of users’ consent, the authoritie­s, known as the Article 29 Working Party (WP29), said.

A spokeswoma­n for WhatsApp said the company was working with data protection authoritie­s to address their questions.

“We’ve had constructi­ve conversati­ons, including before our update, and we remain committed to respecting applicable law,” she said.

Facebook has had run-ins with European privacy watchdogs in the past over its processing of users’ data. However, the fines that regulators can levy are paltry in comparison to the revenues of the big US tech firms concerned.

The EU data protection authoritie­s also wrote to Yahoo over a massive data breach that exposed the e-mail credential­s of 500 million users, as well as its scanning of customers’ incoming e-mails for specific informatio­n provided by US intelligen­ce officials.

Yahoo said they were aware of the letter and would work to respond as appropriat­e.

The watchdogs asked Yahoo to communicat­e all aspects of the data breach to the EU authoritie­s, to notify the affected users of the “adverse effects” and to cooperate with all “upcoming national data protection authoritie­s’ enquiries and/or investigat­ions”.

“The reports [about e-mail scanning] are concerning to WP29 and it will be important to understand the legal basis and justificat­ion for any such surveillan­ce activity, including an explanatio­n of how this is compatible with EU law and protection for EU citizens,” the watchdogs said in their letter to Yahoo. —

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