Turkey probes Facebook's move to collect WhatsApp data

Turkey's Competition Authority launched an investigation on Jan. 11 into Facebook and WhatsApp and suspended their new data sharing rules. "The Competition Board has launched an investigation into Facebook and WhatsApp and suspended the requirement to share Whatsapp data," it said.

Duvar English

The Turkish Competition Board said on Jan. 11 it launched an investigation into WhatsApp and its owner Facebook Inc after the messaging app asked users to agree to let Facebook collect user data including phone numbers and locations.

In a written statement, the Competition Board said it ruled the data-collection requirement should be suspended until the probe is complete.

"The Competition Board has launched an investigation into Facebook and WhatsApp and suspended the requirement to share WhatsApp data," it said.

WhatsApp updated its terms of service on Jan. 6, allowing Facebook and its subsidiaries to collect user data. The deadline for agreeing to the new terms is Feb. 8.

Rival messaging apps Signal and Telegram have since seen a sudden increase in demand.

Turkey's government has targeted social media companies with new restrictions and fines since it passed a law in July it says bolsters local oversight of foreign firms. Critics say the law stifles dissent from Turks who resorted to online platforms after the government tightened its grip on mainstream media.