The Guardian (USA)

What happens when WhatsApp’s new terms start on 15 May?

- Alex Hern UK technology editor

If you have not agreed to WhatsApp’s controvers­ial new terms of service by 15 May, the app will begin to turn off features until you do, Facebook announced in an update to its FAQ page. At that point, the screen asking users to accept the terms of service set by Facebook, WhatsApp’s parent company, will become permanent, with users needing to click through to directly use WhatsApp at all. Users will still be able to interact with the app in other ways for “a few weeks”, however, such as receiving calls, replying to messages, or responding to missed calls.

“After a few weeks of limited functional­ity, you won’t be able to receive incoming calls or notificati­ons and WhatsApp will stop sending messages and calls to your phone,” the company said. At that point, users will have to choose: either they accept the new terms, or they are in effect prevented from using WhatsApp at all.

That softer approach is unusual for

Facebook, which historical­ly has enforced new terms of service by putting an unskippabl­e consent screen up on day one. It comes after a backlash from WhatsApp users in January, when the company first tried to update its terms of service.

Millions of users downloaded alternativ­e apps such as Signal and Telegram

after WhatsApp announced that the new terms would come into effect on 8 February. Viral messages spread on the chat app itself, with some wrongly claiming that the new agreement would give WhatsApp the right to read users’ messages and hand the informatio­n over to Facebook.

WhatsApp was forced to delay the update, and roll out a publicity campaign explaining that the new agreement was simply focused on a new set of features letting users message businesses on the app. “There are no changes to our data sharing with Facebook anywhere in the world,” Niamh Sweeney, WhatsApp’s director of public policy for Europe, the Middle East and Africa, told the home affairs committee earlier this year.

In Germany, Hamburg’s privacy authority has issued a three-month emergency ban on the new terms coming into effect, arguing that they are opaque, inconsiste­nt and overly broad. Facebook said the ban was “based on a fundamenta­l misunderst­anding” of the update.

 ??  ?? WhatsApp’s parent company, Facebook, has come up with a softer approach after a backlash from the messaging platform’s users. Photograph: Nick Ansell/PA
WhatsApp’s parent company, Facebook, has come up with a softer approach after a backlash from the messaging platform’s users. Photograph: Nick Ansell/PA

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