The
Hamburg Commissioner for Data Protection and Freedom of
Information said Facebook was infringing data protection law and
had not obtained effective approval from WhatsApp's 35 million
users in Germany.
"After the acquisition of WhatsApp by Facebook two years ago,
both parties have publicly assured that data will not be shared
between them," commissioner Johannes Caspar said in a statement.
Facebook, the world's biggest social network, bought WhatsApp
for $19 billion in cash and stock in an effort to reach a
younger audience.
"The fact that this is now happening is not only a misleading of
their users and the public, but also constitutes an infringement
of national data protection law," Caspar added.
Facebook, which has its German headquarters in Hamburg and
therefore falls under Caspar's jurisdiction, said in a statement
that it complied with EU data protection law.
"We are open to working with the Hamburg DPA in an effort to
address their questions and resolve any concerns," it said.
The data watchdog said Facebook and WhatsApp were independent
companies that should process their users' data based on their
own terms and conditions and data privacy policies.
The Hamburg commissioner's move comes after EU and U.S.
regulators said they would scrutinize changes to privacy
settings that WhatsApp made in August.
(Reporting by Harro ten Wolde; Additional reporting by Hans-Edzard
Busemann; Editing by Georgina Prodhan)
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