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431 points c420 | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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alex1138 ◴[] No.43685044[source]
I think Whatsapp is the clearest possible case that can be made of any company? They violated the condition of not sharing user data with Facebook

Willing to listen to other opinions on other companies, but surely Whatsapp

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changoplatanero ◴[] No.43685346[source]
That was a voluntary pledge the company made to the users, right? It wasn't a legally binding commitment that there would never ever be any data sharing.
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onlyrealcuzzo ◴[] No.43685616[source]
Dear Users, in our Terms of Service, we tell you that we won't share your data.

Psych, it wasn't legally binding.

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fallingknife ◴[] No.43685787[source]
Correct. A promise is not legally binding unless there is some sort of payment in return. The exception is if you can prove you suffered monetary damages from relying on that promise, which is basically impossible for data sharing.
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1. JumpCrisscross ◴[] No.43686205{3}[source]
> promise is not legally binding unless there is some sort of payment in return

If I recall correctly, I gave them a worldwide, perpetual license to some data.

> if you can prove you suffered monetary damages

This is a separate question (that of calculating damages) from that of whether there was a breach per se.