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Traders’ confederation moves Supreme Court against WhatsApp privacy policy

Advocate Abir Roy filed the petition on behalf of Confederation of All India Traders bringing attention on how policy is Infringing various fundamental rights of citizens of India.

A petition has been filed in the Supreme Court seeking a direction to WhatsApp to withdraws its new privacy policy for being arbitrary and unconstitutional.

The petition has been filed by Advocate Abir Roy on behalf of the Confederation of All India Traders (CAIT) through Advocate on Record Vivek Narayan Sharma. The petitioner has submitted that the policy is encroaching upon various fundamental rights of the citizens granted by the Constitution of India. 

Hence, the petitioner organization has urged the Court to frame guidelines and schemes to govern big technology companies like WhatsApp in order to protect the privacy of citizens and businesses. 

The petitioner has also brought the courts attention to the stark differences in privacy policies adopted by the European Union and India and how the data of Indian users can be misused by big tech companies. 

CAIT National President B.C. Bhartia and Secretary General  Praveen Khandelwal alleged that WhatsApp has adopted the approach of “my way or the highway”, which is arbitrary, unjustified, unconstitutional and cannot be accepted in a democratic country like India. 

Moreover it has been stated that WhatsApp has been fraudulently  collecting personal user data with the promise of non-sharing of user data and strong privacy principles. In 2014, after the acquisition of WhatsApp by Facebook, when the users started doubting the privacy of their data and were in fear that their personal data will be shared with Facebook, WhatsApp promised that nothing would change in the privacy policy after the acquisition. 

However, in August 2016, it was stated by the petitioner that WhatsApp retracted from it and introduced a new Privacy Policy which severely compromised the rights of its users and made the privacy rights of users completely vulnerable. Under the new privacy policy, it allowed the sharing of personal data with Facebook and all its group companies for commercial advertising and marketing. 

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Since then, the company has been altering its policies to collect and process a wider range of information, and share the same with the third party applications, says the petitioner.

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