Top Court Sends a Strong Warning
On Tuesday, the Supreme Court of India gave a strong warning to WhatsApp and Meta, the company that owns WhatsApp, about the privacy rules for 2021. The court made it clear that any business in India had to follow the Constitution to the letter and protect people’s right to privacy. The judges made it clear during the meeting that a platform cannot do business in India if it cannot follow Indian rules and ideals.
The bench was very critical of how WhatsApp handled user data, pointing out that privacy is a basic right. It said that businesses can’t put making money ahead of protecting people’s basic rights. The court’s comments were strong and direct, showing that it was becoming more worried about how big tech companies in India collect and use personal information.
Why the fight over privacy rules in 2021 is important
The case is about WhatsApp’s new privacy rules that came out in 2021. For people to keep using the app, this rule said they had to agree to share their information with companies in Meta’s group. In earlier versions, users could refuse to share their information and still use WhatsApp. In this update, they couldn’t do that.
This take it or leave it attitude caused a lot of worry. Later, the Competition Commission of India said that WhatsApp had abused its market power by making users agree to the policy. It was decided that WhatsApp should pay a large fine, but they refused. Now that the case has reached the Supreme Court, the attention is on bigger problems of privacy and the Constitution.
The court has doubts about user consent
The Supreme Court asked if people really understand what they agree to, which was one of the main points they made. The judges were curious about how people from rural areas, who don’t speak English or who don’t know much about technology, could read and fully understand privacy policies that are written in formal language.
The court said that even intelligent people often have trouble figuring out what these kinds of terms mean. It said that this calls into question the idea of free and informed consent. The bench also didn’t agree with the claim that people can stop using WhatsApp if they don’t agree with the rules. It was said that the app had become an important way for millions of people to communicate, so users couldn’t just quit.
Help from the government and what comes next
The central government agreed with the court’s worries and said the policy for 2021 was unfair and took advantage of people. It said that personal information can’t be shared for business or promotional reasons unless the user actually chooses to do so. Privacy is very important in the digital world, where data is very valuable.
Meta and WhatsApp have been asked by the Supreme Court to explain how they get customer data, what they do with it and how they keep it safe. After looking at the data, there should be more things to do. Many are interested in the case because it might change how India defends data and makes use of digital rights in the future.
The court has now made it clear that big tech companies must follow India’s laws, respect the Constitution and keep users’ data safe. They will have a lot of trouble if they don’t.

