Ban on WhatsApp data transfer to Facebook to stay: German court

IANS  |  Berlin 

In a setback to the social networking giant, a German has upheld its decision asking it to obtain the permission of WhatsApp users in the country before processing their personal data to

The also overturned Germany's privacy regulator's order that the companies delete data they had already transferred, a report in technology website InfoWorld said on Wednesday.

Last August, Facebook-owned WhatsApp changed its privacy policy to allow the transfer of its users' personal information to for processing -- a move that has also created a furore in India.

The move angered the Hamburg Commissioner for Data Protection and Freedom of Information, which in September ordered the companies to stop the transfer until they had obtained users' consent and to delete any data they had already transferred, the report said.

challenged the order in Hamburg's administrative and the handed down its ruling.

The upheld the Commissioner's requirement to obtain consent but gave respite to to delete the data on procedural grounds.

The report said that the giant plans to appeal the court's ruling.

"WhatsApp designed its privacy policy and terms update to comply with applicable law," a spokeswoman was quoted as saying.

There are nearly 35 million WhatsApp users in Germany.

--IANS

sku/vm

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Ban on WhatsApp data transfer to Facebook to stay: German court

In a setback to the social networking giant, a German court has upheld its decision asking it to obtain the permission of WhatsApp users in the country before processing their personal data to Facebook.

In a setback to the social networking giant, a German has upheld its decision asking it to obtain the permission of WhatsApp users in the country before processing their personal data to

The also overturned Germany's privacy regulator's order that the companies delete data they had already transferred, a report in technology website InfoWorld said on Wednesday.

Last August, Facebook-owned WhatsApp changed its privacy policy to allow the transfer of its users' personal information to for processing -- a move that has also created a furore in India.

The move angered the Hamburg Commissioner for Data Protection and Freedom of Information, which in September ordered the companies to stop the transfer until they had obtained users' consent and to delete any data they had already transferred, the report said.

challenged the order in Hamburg's administrative and the handed down its ruling.

The upheld the Commissioner's requirement to obtain consent but gave respite to to delete the data on procedural grounds.

The report said that the giant plans to appeal the court's ruling.

"WhatsApp designed its privacy policy and terms update to comply with applicable law," a spokeswoman was quoted as saying.

There are nearly 35 million WhatsApp users in Germany.

--IANS

sku/vm

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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