WhatsApp, Meta assure SC of compliance with NCLAT order on data privacy rules
Meta Platforms Inc. and WhatsApp told the Supreme Court that they will comply with directions of the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) extending Competition Commission of India (CCI) privacy and consent safeguards to advertising-related data, even as their legal challenge remains pending, PTI reported.
A bench of Chief Justice Surya Kant and Justices Joymalya Bagchi and Vipul M Pancholi was hearing appeals filed by the tech giants against the NCLAT’s directions issued in December last year. The court is also examining a cross-appeal by the CCI challenging the tribunal’s decision allowing continued sharing of user data for advertising purposes.
Taking note of submissions by senior counsel Kapil Sibal, appearing for WhatsApp, that the appellants had decided to implement the tribunal’s directions by March 16, the bench dismissed applications seeking a stay on the NCLAT order while keeping broader issues open for adjudication.
“These applications essentially seek a direction for a stay of the impugned judgment of the NCLAT to the extent it approves the direction issued by the CCI directing Meta to comply with the impugned directions contained in the NCLAT order dated December 15, 2025, containing certain directions issued to Meta,” the CJI said, PTI quoted.
The court clarified that dismissal of the pleas would be “without prejudice” to issues raised in the main appeal and directed the companies to file a compliance report.
“Meanwhile, the appellants' affidavit regarding the privacy policy may be examined by the CCI and a response be placed on record,” the CJI said.
The apex court is hearing appeals against a CCI order that imposed a penalty of Rs 213.14 crore on the companies over WhatsApp’s privacy policy.
Earlier, on February 3, the court had sharply criticised the firms, stating they cannot “play with the right to privacy of citizens in the name of data sharing”, and accused them of creating a monopoly and committing theft of customers’ private information.
Decrying WhatsApp’s privacy policy, the court referred to “silent customers”, describing them as unorganised, digitally dependent and unaware of implications of data-sharing policies, and said, “We will not allow the rights of any citizen of this country to be damaged.”
On November 4, 2025, the NCLAT set aside part of the CCI order that had barred WhatsApp from sharing data with Meta for advertising purposes for five years but retained a Rs 213-crore penalty on the social media platform.
The tribunal later clarified that its ruling on privacy and consent safeguards would apply to user data collection and sharing beyond WhatsApp services, including both advertising and non-advertising purposes.
Taking note of submissions by senior counsel Kapil Sibal, appearing for WhatsApp, that the appellants had decided to implement the tribunal’s directions by March 16, the bench dismissed applications seeking a stay on the NCLAT order while keeping broader issues open for adjudication.
“These applications essentially seek a direction for a stay of the impugned judgment of the NCLAT to the extent it approves the direction issued by the CCI directing Meta to comply with the impugned directions contained in the NCLAT order dated December 15, 2025, containing certain directions issued to Meta,” the CJI said, PTI quoted.
The court clarified that dismissal of the pleas would be “without prejudice” to issues raised in the main appeal and directed the companies to file a compliance report.
“Meanwhile, the appellants' affidavit regarding the privacy policy may be examined by the CCI and a response be placed on record,” the CJI said.
Earlier, on February 3, the court had sharply criticised the firms, stating they cannot “play with the right to privacy of citizens in the name of data sharing”, and accused them of creating a monopoly and committing theft of customers’ private information.
Decrying WhatsApp’s privacy policy, the court referred to “silent customers”, describing them as unorganised, digitally dependent and unaware of implications of data-sharing policies, and said, “We will not allow the rights of any citizen of this country to be damaged.”
On November 4, 2025, the NCLAT set aside part of the CCI order that had barred WhatsApp from sharing data with Meta for advertising purposes for five years but retained a Rs 213-crore penalty on the social media platform.
The tribunal later clarified that its ruling on privacy and consent safeguards would apply to user data collection and sharing beyond WhatsApp services, including both advertising and non-advertising purposes.
Popular from Technology
- Sam Altman issues blunt warning at IIT-Delhi, says: You should not trust me for ...
- After IBM's worst day on stock market, IBM senior vice-president Rob Thomas to everyone betting on AI: New AI tools emerge every week, what they do not change is ...
- Anthropic’s COBOL tool triggers worst single-day drop in 25 years in IBM's stock price: What it is and why it wiped billions of dollar for IBM
- Donald Trump is making Google, Microsoft, Meta, Amazon and others make a promise to Americans: We will ...
- When Steve Jobs told Apple employees during a townhall: Nike sells shoes, and yet ...
end of article
Trending Stories
- The Bride Of Charlie: Candace Owens sparks rift with Erika Kirk exposé; only Matt Walsh speaks out
- CTET Answer Key 2026 Live Updates: CBSE to release answer keys soon, check latest updates here
- Delhi racial abuse case: Woman accused of 'harassing' 3 Arunachal Pradesh women arrested
- ‘Forced to read religious books, told to marry Muslim men’: How 2 sisters and their gang ran rape-conversion racket
- Former Jharkhand CM Champai Soren's grandson dies under mysterious circumstances in Manali
- Delhi court directs cricketer Shikhar Dhawan’s ex-wife to return Rs 5.7cr
- 61km road corridor along Najafgarh drain by Nov 2027 to ease congestion
Featured in technology
- Elon Musk's xAI sends 'throw Anthropic' message to 'angry' Pentagon; says: We will …
- Google Pixel 10a vs Apple iPhone 16: How the two smartphones camera
- Nvidia is about to challenge 'Intel Inside' with its own laptop chips
- After 75 days, Paramount gets some 'good news' from Warner Brothers and what it means for Netflix
- Claude Sonnet 4.6 Update: Ryze startup sales plunge after AI upgrade; Bodnar pivots to agency niche
- After JPMorgan’s shares 'crash', CEO Jamie Dimon calls AI fears overblown; says: We always have strategy to use technology to do a better job, and we are ...
Photostories
- Beyond the fruit bowl: 12 papaya dishes from around the world
- 10 longest bridges in the world and where they are located
- Why dance therapy is becoming a powerful wellness tool in 2026
- Inside India's 4th Richest NRI Anil Agarwal’s Mayfair Residence: Where heritage architecture meets modern innovation
- 18 habits of successful couples that build lasting love, shares relationship coach
- 10 smart ways to add banana to your daily breakfast
- From Pythagoras to Euler: 5 math equations that changed the world
- 5 ways you can clear AI-led interviews in 2026
- 8 baby names inspired by visionaries and world‑changers
- 10 Indian dishes that reduce gas and bloating plus 3 pachak recipes inside
Up Next
Start a Conversation
Post comment