Facebook’s plans to merge WhatsApp, Instagram, and Facebook Messenger are drawing the scrutiny of European data watchdogs. The New York Times first broke plans of the merger on Friday. The Irish Data Protection Commission is asking Facebook for “an urgent briefing on what is being proposed.”
The commission, which regulates Facebook in the European
Union, says it understands that the company’s plans are still in initial
development and haven’t materialized yet. Still, the commission says it will be seeking “early assurances” that the plans will comply with the GDPR, the European Union’s far-reaching privacy regulation.
In 2016, Facebook attempted to share personal user data gathered by WhatsApp with the larger business, but the plan was canceled after an investigation by the UK’s data protection watchdog.
The proposed merging of the services has already drawn criticism from US officials,
some of whom say that red flags should have been raised when Facebook
initially acquired WhatsApp and Instagram. “Imagine how different the
world would be if Facebook had to compete with Instagram and WhatsApp.
That would have encouraged real competition that would have promoted
privacy and benefited consumers,” Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA), a lawmaker who
represents much of Silicon Valley, said last week.
Another point of contention is that out of the three
messaging apps, WhatsApp is the only one to offer end-to-end encryption.
If the three merged, there’s the possibility that WhatsApp would lose
that key advantage, meaning users who relied on its secure features
would seriously lose out.
The Article was Published on : TheVerge
Ireland is questioning Facebook’s plan to merge Messenger, Instagram, and WhatsApp
Reviewed by svsathya
on
5:55 AM
Rating:
Reviewed by svsathya
on
5:55 AM
Rating:

No comments: