WhatsApp co-founder Brian Acton.

WhatsApp co-founder Acton asks all users to delete Facebook

It is time. #deletefacebook; Brian Acton tweeted to more than 23,000 followers

Agency Report | San Francisco | 21 March, 2018 | 09:50 PM

Over the past week, questions have been raised over Facebook’s alleged role in influencing the 2016 US presidential elections, changing public opinion at the time of UK's Brexit referendum and even helping Nitish Kumar's JD(U) achieve a landslide victory in the 2010 Bihar Assembly polls. Arguably the biggest data breach of its kind, Facebook, till now, has only tried to shrug off responsibility by playing the leak as a case of breach of trust by one of its partner developers. And now one of the founders of WhatsApp has asked users to delete the social media platform. Mark Zuckerberg's Facebook bought WhatsApp for $19 billion in 2014

Brian Acton, co-founder of WhatsApp, late on Tuesday asked users to “delete” the social media platform, Facebook, amid alleged data leakage of its users for political purposes.

“It is time. #deletefacebook,” Brian Acton tweeted to more than 23,000 of his followers.

WhatsApp was acquired by Facebook in 2014.

Facebook is facing a major backlash after reports emerged that the political data analytics firm, Cambridge Analytica, accessed the data of its 50 million users without their permission.

The company received the user data from a Facebook app years ago that purported to be a psychological research tool, however, the firm was not authorised to have that information.

Earlier on Tuesday, UK’s data protection watchdog sought a court warrant to search the London headquarters of the political data analytics consultancy that worked with Donald Trump’s election team and allegedly harvested Facebook profiles of US voters to influence their choices at the ballot box.

The UK Information Commissioner also ordered the auditors hired by Facebook to stand down when they visited the Cambridge Analytica headquarters.

Meanwhile, lawmakers from the US and the UK have called for action following the reports of the data leak of the Facebook users.

Mark Zuckerberg’s Facebook bought WhatsApp for $19 billion in 2014 but Acton remained with the company for several years before quitting to start “Signal Foundation” earlier in 2018.

Last month, he invested $50 million into “Signal”, an independent alternative to hugely-popular WhatsApp.

Another WhatsApp co-founder, Jan Koum, still leads the company and sits on Facebook’s board. (IANS)