Facebook accused of misleading EU in WhatsApp takeover probe

epa05614715 (FILE) A file picture dated 20 February 2014 shows The Facebook and WhatsApp app icons displayed on an iPhone in New York, USA. Social media giant Facebook on 02 November 2016 posted for its Q3 of 2016's adjusted earnings of 1.09 US dollars per share on revenue of some seven billion US dollars and an advertising revenue of 6.82 billionUS dollars, outperfoming analysts' expectations.  EPA/ANDREW GOMBERT

 

Bloomberg

Facebook Inc. risks a multimillion-euro fine for allegedly misleading European Union merger watchdogs when it won approval to buy the WhatsApp messaging service in 2014.
The EU’s antitrust authority said in a statement on Tuesday it suspects Facebook supplied “incorrect or misleading information” on linking data with WhatsApp when regulators cleared the tie-up two years ago. Officials said approval for the $22 billion deal isn’t under threat.
Facebook is the latest US technology giant in the EU’s sights this year after it ordered Apple Inc. to repay some 13 billion euros ($13.5 billion) in back taxes and stepped up three separate antitrust investigations into Google’s behavior. The US company is “confident that a full review of the facts will confirm Facebook has acted in good faith,” it said in an e-mailed statement. “We’ve consistently provided accurate information about our technical capabilities and plans, including in submissions about the WhatsApp acquisition and in voluntary briefings before WhatsApp’s privacy policy update.”
EU Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager said earlier this year that officials were quizzing Facebook over privacy policy changes announced in August that would allow the advertising platforms on Facebook and Instagram to draw upon data from WhatsApp. The Menlo Park, California-based company said in 2014 it couldn’t combine WhatsApp data with its other services — a move it made earlier this year. Facebook informed regulators in August 2014 that it wouldn’t be able to establish “reliable automated matching between the two companies’ user accounts,” the EU said. The European regulator now says this was technically possible at the time. The penalty for breaking the rules is as high as 1 percent of annual sales. Facebook has until Jan. 31 to respond to the EU’s statement of objections. It caps a terrible year for Facebook in Europe as regulators took aim at how it uses personal data and shares posts that may incite hatred. Germany opened an antitrust investigation in March to check whether the company unfairly forces users to sign up to restrictive privacy terms.

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