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Topic Summary

Posted by: Rajih
« on: June 27, 2019, 02:35:27 AM »



WhatsApp is testing the concept of allowing users to share messages with other applications from their WhatsApp status. Starting today, the beta program of WhatsApp customers will begin to see a fresh sharing option below their status, Which can be used to directly post a status to your Facebook story or to send it to another app such as Instagram, Gmail or Google Photos. WhatsApp Status is the Instagram Stories-style function of the service that allows you to post pictures, text, and videos that disappear after 24 hours on your profile.

WhatsApp has to be careful about creating the impression of data sharing with Facebook. When Facebook acquired the messaging service back in 2014, WhatsApp promised that it wouldn’t share user data with Facebook and said that it would function “independently and autonomously.”

That changed in 2016 when the company said it would start sharing user data with Facebook. Since then, Facebook has been told by the French and German regulators to stop the practice. In 2017, the company was fined $122 million by the European Commission for misleading regulators about the extent to which it could link accounts prior to the acquisition.



Although there’s a direct link to share your status to Facebook, WhatsApp tells me that it’s not doing anything to link your accounts on the two services. Instead, it’s making use of the same iOS and Android data-sharing APIs as every other app, meaning data is transferred between the apps on-device.

Even if you share data to another Facebook-owned service like Instagram, WhatsApp says the two posts will be separate events in Facebook’s systems, and they will not be linked. There is also no option to have your WhatsApp status automatically shared to another service; WhatsApp tells it wants the feature to be an active decision on the part of the user.

To be clear, WhatsApp’s new status sharing feature doesn’t do any of the data sharing that’s gotten Facebook into trouble in the past. But as Facebook moves toward allowing users from all three of its major services to message each other across a single technical backend, even seemingly innocuous features like this can risk intense scrutiny.

Launched back in 2017, WhatsApp Status has since grown to be used by 500 million users daily, and in 2020, it will become the first place in the WhatsApp app to show ads.

The Verge

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