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Mark Zuckerberg defends WhatsApp privacy policy amid India backlash

 In a quarterly earnings call with analysts on Wednesday, Zuckerberg said that the company has moved the date of this update back to give everyone time to understand what the update means.

Mark Zuckerberg

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has defended the upcoming WhatsApp privacy policy that has witnessed a massive backlash in India, saying that the update does not change the privacy of anyone’s messages with friends and family. The WhatsApp policy has now been put on hold till May 15. It aims to share commercial user data with parent Facebook. The Indian government has also written a letter to WhatsApp CEO Will Cathcart to withdraw the policy.

In a quarterly earnings call with analysts on Wednesday, Zuckerberg said that the company has moved the date of this update back to give everyone time to understand what the update means. “All of these messages are end-to-end encrypted, which means we can’t see or hear what you say and we never will, unless the person that you message chooses to share it and business messages will only be hosted on our infrastructure if the business chooses to do so,” Zuckerberg said.

More than 175 million people message WhatsApp Business accounts every day. “We are building new features to make it even easier to transact with businesses in the app,” the Facebook CEO added. “We’re building tools to let businesses store and manage their WhatsApp chats using our secure hosting infrastructure if they would like and we’re in the process of updating WhatsApp’s privacy policy in terms of service to reflect these optional experiences”.

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