The Competition Commission of India (CCI) is seeking further clarification from the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) concerning its recent ruling on WhatsApp's privacy policy and data sharing. Specifically, the CCI wants the tribunal to specify whether user consent is required for WhatsApp and Meta Platforms when user data is used for advertising purposes, as distinct from non-advertising purposes.
This move comes after the NCLAT, earlier this month, provided partial relief to WhatsApp. The tribunal set aside a part of the CCI's earlier order that had banned WhatsApp from sharing user data with Meta Platforms for advertising activities for five years. However, the NCLAT upheld the INR 213 crore penalty imposed by the CCI on WhatsApp. It also affirmed that WhatsApp's 2021 privacy policy update indeed violated antitrust laws, constituted an abuse of its dominant position, and led to market denial.
The matter has been scheduled for its next hearing on November 25.
The CCI's counsel informed the press that the watchdog needs clarity on the scope of user consent required. While the tribunal's concluding remarks seemingly indicated that user consent is paramount regardless of the purpose, the counsel noted that the judgment was not explicit about the treatment of data for advertising purposes. The CCI has filed an application to clarify that user consent must be taken for all data sharing, whether for advertising or non-advertising uses, with other Meta companies.
The core issue revolves around WhatsApp's contentious 2021 privacy policy update, which the CCI previously stated users had to accept on a 'take it or leave it' basis. The CCI had deemed this an abuse of dominant position and ordered changes, including limits on mandatory data sharing for accessing the service in India. Meta and WhatsApp had challenged this order, receiving interim relief from the NCLAT in January regarding the five-year ban on data sharing for advertising.
Impact:
This clarification from the NCLAT could significantly shape how major technology companies like Meta Platforms handle user data for advertising and other purposes within India. It may lead to stricter data privacy protocols, impact advertising revenue models for digital platforms operating in India, and set precedents for future regulatory actions concerning data usage and antitrust practices in the tech sector. The final ruling could also influence investor confidence in companies reliant on user data.
Difficult Terms:
- Competition Commission of India (CCI): India's statutory body responsible for promoting and sustaining competition in markets, preventing activities that harm competition, and protecting the interests of consumers.
- National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT): An appellate tribunal that hears appeals against orders passed by the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) and is also the appellate authority for orders passed by the CCI under certain sections of the Competition Act.
- Antitrust laws: Laws designed to promote fair competition in the marketplace by prohibiting anti-competitive practices such as monopolies, cartels, and abuse of dominant positions.
- Abuse of dominance: When a company with significant market power exploits its position to stifle competition or harm consumers.
- Market denial: A situation where a dominant player makes it impossible or extremely difficult for competitors to enter or operate in a particular market.
- User consent: The explicit permission given by an individual for their data to be collected, used, or shared.