WhatsApp has reversed course on its new privacy policy… well, slightly. The Facebook-owned app started to inform users about its new terms and conditions earlier this week using in-app notifications, with users told to agree to the new small-print if they wanted
WhatsApp is battling mistrust globally after it updated its privacy policy to let it share some user data with the parent company, Facebook, and other group firms, and the backlash risks thwarting its ambitions in its biggest market, India. Though WhatsApp has
Changes to privacy terms by WhatsApp has caused an exodus of users to rivals Telegram and Signal. WhatsApp, a Facebook-owned messaging service that has more than two billion users, has recently announced controversial changes to its privacy terms, prompting a mass exodus
WhatsApp is changing its privacy policy and has started to send a notification to its two billion users about the change, which kick-in from February 8, 2021. The upshot on these new terms and conditions is users outside of the European Union
WhatsApp users will need to agree to a new privacy policy by February 8, 2021 or face a total block from the most popular chat app. In recent days, WhatsApp users have started to receive notifications about the incoming changes. The message
Turkish presidency will switch to local app BiP to brief journalists following WhatsApp’s controversial new usage terms. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s media office says it is quitting WhatsApp after the messaging app’s move to oblige many of its users to agree
Meghan Markle and Prince Harry included a short snippet of their son Archie wishing listeners a Happy New Year during their recent Spotify podcast. However, royal commentators Chris Ship and Lizzie Robinson have argued this could be viewed as a contradiction to
The story of how Israeli-made spyware Pegasus works, the hacking of journalists' phones and its ominous consequences.
Expats Stephen and Tina Clinton were seen in the first episode putting the final touches to their sprawling holiday village, Casa Branca, in the Algarve. The A New Life in the Sun couple have built a bar, chalet and tipi on the
We ask whether the surveillance industry is out of control and discuss climate change with activist Nnimmo Bassey.