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Facebook Told To Stop Taking Data From German WhatsApp Users (bloomberg.com)

An anonymous reader shares a Bloomberg report: Facebook, already under scrutiny in the U.S. and the European Union for revisions to privacy policies for its WhatsApp messaging service, was ordered by Hamburg's privacy watchdog to stop processing data of German users of the chat service. In a renewed clash with the social-network operator, Johannes Caspar, one of Germany's most outspoken data protection commissioners, ordered Facebook to delete any data it already has. The news comes as EU privacy regulators, who previously expressed concerns about the policy shift, meet in Brussels to discuss their position. There's no legal basis for Facebook to use information of WhatsApp customers, Caspar said Tuesday. "This order protects the data of about 35 million WhatsApp users in Germany," Caspar said. "It has to be their decision as to whether they want to connect their account with Facebook. Therefore, Facebook has to ask for their permission in advance. This has not happened."

6 of 39 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Johannes Caspar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's not a "guy", it's a public offical telling Facebook that in the eyes of the adminstration, they are violating the law, and that they need to stop doing that. It's the same thing as a policeman stopping your car and telling you you were speeding. Now you can either accept their verdict or ignore it, at which point it is going to court.

  2. At least there is one state by vikingpower · · Score: 4, Insightful

    having the decency to squarely tell Facebook "you're breaking our laws, stop it or else".

    --
    Religous speak to God. Insane are spoken to by God. When all shut up, one can finally hear Shostakovich in peace
  3. This is important. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It is not discussed enough, if people have faith in company A and are happy to away their information to that company, that is fine. If company A then gets bought out in a hostile takeover by nasty company B - the original members never signed up to that and everyone should explicitly be made to opt in or all user data should be deleted. These huge companies are getting away with it all the time and posting conditions of service like it somehow absolves them from any laws. Creating a monopoly should be hindered, not rewarded.

  4. Re:Easy to fix by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    I woke for a large German company, and we just received notice that the app will be removed from all of our corporate phones if installed. I am not sure why the app became so popular in Germany specifically.

  5. Facebook by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Facebook, Microsoft, and Google, all have one thing in common. Their existence is based on extracting information from you. I'm really starting to distance myself. The Internet isn't interesting like it used to be. It seems very monopolized with a herd-like mentality. People seem to have become a product for the Internet, rather than the Internet being a product for the people.

  6. Re:Easy to fix by psycho12345 · · Score: 2

    As far as I'm aware, the main thing WhatsApp has going for it, in a similar way Skype did, is that it allows international texting on the cheap.

    I believe here in the US it isn't much to add on to a wireless plan to get international texting, but in other parts of the world, they charge by the text and gouge pretty hard on it. I would be interested to know how much Deutsche Telekom (or other major wireless operators) charge for international texts.

    So WhatApp is the perfect mix of ease of use (no login needed), cheap (was 1 USD a year after the first year, now its free), and by passes the expensive text charges.

    As an anecdote, I regularly text a small group, with one person in the UK, another in Singapore, and another in Thailand. Last I looked, if I didn't have unlimited international texting in my wireless plan, it would be like 25 cents PER TEXT. So a small conversation of rapid fire texts would rack up pretty fast.