
Supreme Court of India directs Whatsapp to implement CCI user-consent safeguards under Sections 4 and 27 of the Competition Act, while NCLAT penalty remains upheld.
Case in NewsWhatsApp To Implement CCI Data Sharing Order heard by Supreme Court of India over privacy policy dispute. |
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Case Overview
Case Name: WhatsApp LLC & Meta Platforms Inc. vs. Competition Commission of India
A Bench of the Supreme Court of India comprising Chief Justice Surya Kant, Justice Joymalya Bagchi & Justice Vipul Pancholi heard appeals arising from proceedings initiated by the CCI against Whatsapp . The dispute concerns the 2021 privacy policy update mandating data sharing with Meta . The regulator imposed a ₹213.14 crore penalty for abuse of dominance under competition law. The order was partly upheld by the NCLAT leading to further appeals before the apex court .
Key Aspects
The controversy centers on whether Whatsapp’s 2021 privacy policy violated competition law principles . The case raises significant questions about dominance in the OTT messaging market & user autonomy in data sharing. It also distinguishes privacy concerns from competition law violations .
- 2021 policy made data sharing with Meta mandatory.
- 2016 policy permitted opt-out from Facebook data sharing .
- CCI held the policy constituted abuse of dominance.
- ₹213.14 crore penalty imposed on Whatsapp .
- NCLAT upheld the penalty but modified certain findings .
- Core issue: Whether “take-it-or-leave-it” policy violates competition law.
Legal Insights
The matter primarily involves interpretation of the Competition Act, 2002. The regulator examined whether dominant position was abused through unfair conditions. The appellate scrutiny also addressed remedial powers & proportionality of penalties.
Abuse of Dominance – Section 4, Competition Act, 2002
- Prohibits imposition of unfair or discriminatory conditions .
- Mandates assessment of dominance in relevant markets .
Penalty Powers – Section 27, Competition Act, 2002
- Empowers CCI to impose monetary penalties.
- Allows issuance of corrective directions.
Appellate Jurisdiction – Section 53B, Competition Act, 2002
- Governs appeals before the NCLAT.
Court’s Verdict
The Supreme Court of India permitted Whatsapp & Meta to withdraw the interim applications challenging enforcement of user-choice safeguards. The Court recorded the undertaking to implement NCLAT directions by March 16 & directed submission of a compliance report before the CCI. The main appeal challenging the 2021 privacy policy remains pending .
Source – Supreme Court of India
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