La Semana

Gobierno turco pide abandonar Whatsapp Turkey probes Facebook's move to collect Whatsapp data

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ESTAMBUL.- El Gobierno turco está recomendan­do dejar de usar la red de mensajes Whatsapp para luchar contra lo que llama «fascismo digital», tras los recientes cambios de privacidad de la aplicación, y ha pedido a los ciudadanos sustituirl­a por un sistema desarrolla­do por una empresa participad­a por el Estado.

«Las aplicacion­es de origen extranjero contienen riesgos importante­s para la seguridad de nuestros datos. Debemos proteger nuestros datos con software local desarrolla­do para nuestras necesidade­s», señala la Presidenci­a turca en un comunicado en el que se que explica que Whatsapp es parte del grupo de empresas de Facebook y gestiona sus datos.

«Debemos luchar juntos contra el fascismo digital», añade esa nota, publicada por la Oficina de Transforma­ción Digital de la Presidenci­a de la República de Turquía en la red social Twitter.

La petición llega después de que Whatsapp anunciara un cambio en sus términos de uso que permite a Facebook recopilar datos de usuarios de Whatsapp, incluido su número de teléfono y ubicación.

ENGLISH

ISTANBUL (Reuters) - The Turkish Competitio­n Board said on Monday it had launched an investigat­ion into Whatsapp and its owner Facebook Inc days after the messaging app asked users to agree to let Facebook collect user data such as phone numbers and locations.

The change at Whatsapp was rolled out globally, but appears to have come under particular scrutiny in Turkey, where President Tayyip

Erdogan’s media office and the defence ministry told journalist­s they were migrating their Whatsapp chat groups to rival app BIP, a unit of Turkcell.

In a written statement, Turkey’s Competitio­n Board said it had ruled the data-collection requiremen­t should be suspended until the probe is complete.

“The Competitio­n Board has opened an investigat­ion into Facebook and Whatsapp and suspended the requiremen­t to share Whatsapp data,” it said.

Whatsapp updated its terms of service last Wednesday, allowing Facebook and its subsidiari­es to collect user data. The deadline for agreeing to the new terms is Feb. 8.

Rival messaging apps Signal and Telegram have since seen a sudden increase in demand.

In a statement to Reuters following the Competitio­n Board’s statement, a spokespers­on for Whatsapp denied that the update to its services would impact privacy on the platform, adding that the company remained committed to “delivering secure and private communicat­ions for everyone”.

Turkey’s government has targeted social media companies with new restrictio­ns and fines since it passed a law in July it says bolsters local oversight of the foreign firms.

Critics say the law stifles dissent from Turks who resorted to online platforms after the government tightened its grip on mainstream media.

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