Arthur T Knackerbracket has processed the following story:
India's Competition Commission has slapped Meta with a five-year ban on using info collected from WhatsApp to help with advertising on its other platforms.
The regulator (ICC) on Monday explained its decision, referring back to a February 2021 change to WhatsApp's privacy policies that the Commission argued "expanded scope of data collection as well as mandatory data sharing with Meta companies."
Failure to agree to the changes would have meant quitting WhatsApp.
Indian citizens were of course free to do so. But the Commission wondered if it was practical to quit WhatsApp, and therefore whether Meta enjoys market dominance.
The ICC decided Meta leads two markets in India: over-the-top messaging apps, and online display advertising.
[...] The ICC has ordered several remedies.
One is a fine of ₹213.14 crore – about $25 million and therefore back-of-the-sofa money for Meta.
A more substantial requirement means Meta can no longer make acceptance of its privacy policy a condition for users to use WhatsApp in India. The Register imagines that order creates the potential for a substantial population of users to opt out of some data collection.
Meta will have time to learn to live with that sort of thing. Another sanction is a five-year ban on sharing user data collected on WhatsApp with other parts of Meta for advertising purposes.
Another element of the order requires future versions of WhatsApp legalese to "include a detailed explanation of the user data shared with other Meta Companies or Meta Company Products" that specifies "the purpose of data sharing, linking each type of data to its corresponding purpose."
(Score: 4, Insightful) by corey on Saturday November 23, @08:46PM
But hang on, WhatsApp is end to end encrypted, right? That means they can’t access the data for advertising?
(Eyeroll)
Unfortunately I have to use it too. I live rural and our neighbours have a group chat. I’ve tried to convince them to go with signal but WhatsApp is entrenched, I can’t force others to install and sign up to a new system.