SC questions WhatsApp, Meta on personal data

  • Supreme Court (2026) questioned WhatsApp–Meta on sharing and commercial use of user data, warning against violating Article 21 privacy rights of millions of Indian “silent consumers.”
  • Case relates to challenge against CCI penalty of 213.14 crore (2023) imposed for WhatsApp’s 2021 privacy policy update enabling greater data sharing with Meta.
  • Court highlighted that data carries economic value, not merely privacy concerns, and sought comparison of India’s law with EUs stricter digital regulations.

Relevance

  • GS2 (Polity): Right to privacy, DPDP Act
  • GS2 (Governance): Digital regulation, institutional oversight
  • Personal data includes identifiers, location, online behaviour, and metadata; such data fuels targeted advertising, AI training, and platform revenue models in the global digital economy.
  • WhatsApp has 500+ million users in India, its largest market globally, making Indian citizens’ data a major economic asset for global tech firms.
  • Scholar Shoshana Zuboff terms this model surveillance capitalism, where user behaviour is continuously tracked and monetised for predictive advertising.
  • K.S. Puttaswamy (2017) declared privacy a fundamental right under Article 21, including informational self-determination and limits on non-consensual data use.
  • DPDP Act, 2023 mandates consent, purpose limitation, and data fiduciary duties, with penalties up to ₹250 crore per breach for non-compliance.
  • However, DPDP focuses on privacy harms, not explicitly on economic exploitation or value extraction from aggregated data.
  • India’s digital regulation split among MeitY (data protection), CCI (competition), RBI (financial data), TRAI (telecom), creating fragmented oversight over Big Tech platforms.
  • CCI found WhatsApp’s policy violated Section 4 of Competition Act (abuse of dominance) by forcing data-sharing conditions on users.
  • Supreme Court scrutiny indicates shift toward converged regulation linking privacy, competition, and consumer protection.
  • Global digital advertising market exceeds $600 billion (2024 estimates), with Meta and Google controlling a dominant share using behavioural data analytics.
  • Meta’s revenue is ~97% ad-driven, showing direct linkage between personal data profiling and corporate profitability.
  • Data-driven network effects create entry barriers, reinforcing Big Tech dominance and raising antitrust concerns.
  • India has ~850 million internet users, but digital literacy remains uneven; many users cannot interpret complex privacy policies or consent architectures.
  • Solicitor General noted citizens are not only consumers but products, reflecting commodification of user data without direct user compensation.
  • Raises ethical issues of informational asymmetry, consent manipulation, and exploitation of vulnerable users.
  • End-to-end encryption protects message content, but not metadata like contacts, timestamps, device data, or behavioural signals used for profiling.
  • Studies show metadata can reveal social networks and preferences, often sufficient for targeted advertising without reading messages.
  • Cross-platform integration allows Meta to combine FacebookInstagramWhatsApp data ecosystems for richer user profiling.
  • EU GDPR allows fines up to 4% of global turnover, leading to multi-billion-euro penalties on Big Tech for data violations.
  • EU Digital Services Act (DSA) regulates algorithmic targeting and systemic platform risks, going beyond narrow privacy to platform accountability.
  • India’s DPDP framework is less stringent on platform power and data value issues.
  • India contributes one of the largest global data pools due to scale of digital public infrastructure and smartphone penetration.
  • Surveys show over 90% users accept privacy policies without reading, weakening the legal fiction of informed consent.
  • Data brokerage industry globally valued at $250+ billion, built on personal data trade.
  • Consent fatigue makes repeated permissions meaningless, reducing genuine autonomy.
  • DPDP lacks explicit provisions on data valuation, revenue-sharing, or algorithmic accountability.
  • Enforcement capacity of the Data Protection Board still evolving.
  • Balancing innovation and regulation remains a policy tension.
  • Introduce granular, multilingual, simplified consent dashboards for real informed choice.
  • Develop framework on data value, benefit-sharing, and algorithmic transparency.
  • Strengthen coordination between MeitY, CCI, and sectoral regulators.
  • Build capacity and independence of Data Protection Board.
  • Align gradually with global best practices while preserving India’s digital innovation ecosystem.

February 2026
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