"As part of the Facebook Companies, WhatsApp receives information from, and shares information with, the other Facebook Companies. We may use the information we receive from them, and they may use the information we share with them, to help operate, provide, improve, understand, customize, support and market our Services and their offerings, including the Facebook Company Products."WhatsApp announced an update to their privacy policies on Jan. 7. The new update would require users to give their consent to allow Facebook access to their data, including their personal phone numbers and information regarding how they interact with others on the app. Users must accept the privacy policies before they can use the app, and it will apply regardless of whether or not the person has a Facebook account. Other data that could be shared with Facebook includes a user's IP address, browser details, primary language, time zone and how users interact with businesses and with other brands owned by Facebook, including Instagram. Additionally, users will be forced to provide payment account and transaction information. The update will be released on Feb. 8, and it affects all WhatsApp users in countries outside of the European Union and the United Kingdom, where strict data protection laws are currently preventing Facebook's overreach. (Related: TECHNO-TYRANNY: Apple Maps blocked service to people looking for directions to Washington, D.C. to attend March for Trump.) "Deleted my WhatsApp today," said one user. "I've been using Signal for a while and think it's brilliant, hope y'all will join me over there." "I've just deleted WhatsApp and Instagram from my phone because their new terms and conditions freak me out," said another user. "I deleted my WhatsApp last week," added a third user. "I definitely lost some contacts and that sucks, but I've come to see Facebook as a criminal enterprise; I can't afford to give them access to my data." "Woke up to WhatsApp's take it or leave it styled Privacy Policy update," said one user based in Chennai, India. "Desperate times call for moves to keep Facebook alive and relevant."
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