Tencent denies storing WeChat records

APD NEWS

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Tencent Holdings, whose WeChat messaging app has more than 1 billion users worldwide, said it does not store any user chat histories, after Chinese automotive industry tycoon Li Shufu reportedly slammed the company for invading user privacy.

The contents of WeChat conversations are stored only on the user’s mobile phone, computer or other terminal devices, WeChat said in a post on its official account on Tuesday. The social media app also does not use any of the content for Big data analysis, it said.

As WeChat neither stores nor analyses users’ chat content, it is purely a misconception to say that “we are watching your WeChat every day”, according to the statement. “Please rest assured that privacy has always been one of Wechat’s most important principles. We have neither the authority nor reason to look at your WeChat.”

Tencent’s WeChat has gained prominence in everyday usage in China and extended its use from being a communication tool and mobile payment channel to being used as a digital alternative to the national identification card. A Beijing court has also recently started accepting filings by people using the platform.

WeChat, officially launched in 2011 and known as Weixin in China, has evolved into the country’s largest social network with 980 million monthly active users in the quarter ended September 30, according to Shenzhen-based Tencent.

The statement came after Li Shufu, chairman of Chinese carmaker Geely, criticised Tencent for invading the users’ privacy on WeChat. Tencent chairman Pony Ma Huateng “is watching us through WeChat every day because he can see whatever he wants”, said Li during a public event on January 1, according to Sina.com.

This is not the first time Tencent has had to address criticism of accessing WeChat users’ chat logs.

Last year, Tencent got into a dispute with telecommunications equipment maker Huawei Technologies over the right to collect user data from WeChat installed on Huawei’s smartphones. That prompted the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology to tell both companies to resolve their dispute.

China is not alone in the ongoing debate over privacy.

In the United States, Facebook, operator of the world’s largest social network, has been frequently criticised for its approach to user data from both consumers and regulators. In 2011, the US Federal Trade Commission argued Facebook deceived consumers by telling them they could keep their information on the site private while “repeatedly allowing it to be shared and made public”.

Last month, France’s privacy watchdog ordered Facebook to stop collecting data from WhatsApp, the messaging platform it acquired in 2014. In response, the company repeatedly updated its privacy policy and settings in a bid to make it clearer for users.

Apple was thrust into the privacy spotlight after the FBI’s attempt to force the company to unlock an iPhone used by a terrorist during the San Bernardino attack in 2015, something Apple refused to do.

Critics have argued that by not sending personal data to the cloud, Apple may be limiting its artificial intelligence assistant Siri’s development by starving it of the information it needs to become more personalised.

(SCMP)