CNET : Indian privacy case against WhatsApp gains momentum

WhatsApp users can opt in to find out when someone they're communicating with changes their encryption key. Can Facebook intercept your WhatsApp messages? Then, on Friday, the Guardian dropped a bombshell: WhatsApp, and potentially other parties like government agencies, may have access to WhatsApp messages thanks to a security backdoor in the app. The problem now, he says, is that WhatsApp automatically resends the message when the encryption key changes. Ever since WhatsApp announced in August it would share some user information with its parent company Facebook, privacy activists have left one eyebrow permanently arched in skepticism toward the secure messaging app.


WhatsApp again dogged by privacy questions, but there's a fix

Can Facebook intercept your WhatsApp messages?Not so fast.Ever since WhatsApp announced in August it would share some user information with its parent company Facebook, privacy activists have left one eyebrow permanently arched in skepticism toward the secure messaging app.

WhatsApp again dogged by privacy questions, but there's a fix
NEW DELHI: In a significant decision, the Supreme Court agreed on Monday to examine whether Facebook 's access to details of calls, messages, photographs and documents exchanged by 160 million Indian users of WhatsApp violated citizens' right to privacy The court sought responses from Facebook, WhatsApp, Centre and Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai), and also sought the assistance of attorney general Mukul Rohatgi keeping in mind the constitutional question raised by two petitioners.Taking on Facebook Inc, WhatsApp and Facebook India Online Services Pvt Ltd are engineering student Karmanya Singh Sareen, 19, and law student Shreya Sethi, 22.In a David vs Goliath litigation, legal luminary Harish Salve argued for the minnows.He said WhatsApp had become a utility service for exchange of messages, calls and documents for a huge population.This warranted a direction from the SC to the Centre to regulate WhatsApp, now owned by Facebook, to prevent it from accessing data created by citizens and disseminated through their medium.A bench of Chief Justice J S Khehar and Justice D Y Chandrachud was initially hesitant to entertain the petition.
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