Facebook Stops Collecting WhatsApp User Data in Europe After Government Pressure (theverge.com)
Facebook has stopped collecting WhatsApp user data across Europe, bowing to pressure from privacy watchdogs across the continent. The shift in policy means that European users of the messaging app will no longer have information -- including phone numbers -- relayed to Facebook, but the social network says it may only be a temporary suspension while the laws are debated. From a report on The Verge: "We hope to continue our detailed conversations with the UK Information Commissioner's Office and other data protection officials," Facebook says, confirming that it "remain[s] open to working collaboratively to address their questions." Facebook bought WhatsApp for $19 billion in 2014, but only started to collect data from its users in August this year. That move drew criticism from Europe's data collection authorities, 28 of whom signed an open letter sent last month in which they urged WhatsApp CEO Jan Koum to suspend data collection until the legality was worked out.
I don't believe for half a fart that they've stopped. They're either still doing it and lying about it, or still collecting it but waiting for some "oopsie" "bug" to send it all up to the mothership at some point, at which point they'll say they've deleted it and expect us to believe it.
As many of you are starting to realize, there are seven active NSA collector building complexes active in the territorial US, and the UK, France, and Germany all operate active feeder units as well, collecting all WhatsApp, FB, and cell traffic, including all phone backups for both Droids and Apple and desktops, primarily at the carrier and network interconnect levels.
So it's really a moot point. Your data is still being collected, but they're lying to you about it.
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
Also, as of the latest update, one can also do video chat. Actually, the reason WhatsApp caught on was not only free SMS over one's internet connection, but also, that one could send photos and short video clips. While this could also be done on iPhones, Androids and Windows Phones, the messaging was not uniform: Androids or Lumias couldn't get iMessage, iOS couldn't get Windows messages and so on. WhatsApp levels it for all of them. And as of this week, people can also do video chats, which makes it the first cross platform video chat client for not only iOS and Android, but Windows Phone as well
Brexit was necessary to allow David Cameron to gamble for a stronger position in his ruling party. He just didn't imagine how many of his people would believe the weird lies of the "Leave" campaign, and was way too confident the Brexit would be turned down, anyway. After all, the EU was the perfect scape goat for UK politicians, who were voting for plan X in the EU comission, but told the people of UK at the same time how evil the EU was to go for plan X. They did that many times, on many topics. And were surprised that this made the Brexit voters an easy prey for the "Leave"-campaign.
Because one end is the WhatsApp servers. The communication is not peer-to-peer, but relayed.
Essentially, after acquiring WhatsApp, Facebook turned it into a man in the middle to datamine all connections going through it. And quite probably that was the WhatsApp business plan all along: build up a network interesting enough for one of the big data miners to acquire.
"I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?