WeChat users have now been informed that their favorite messaging app is sharing pretty much all of their private data with government.
After downloading the app’s latest patch, WeChat users were prompted to accept the updated privacy policy to be able to use the app.
In the new privacy statement, the company revealed that personal data, including the messages users type into the app, are surrendered to the Chinese regime in compliance with “applicable laws or regulations” in the country.
Aside from your personal information and messages, the app also stores users’ private log data such as “information about what you have searched for and looked at while using WeChat,” and “people you’ve communicated with and the time, data and duration of your communications.” The company mainly uses such collected data to customize advertisements and direct marketing.
However, the new privacy policy admitted that the company would “retain, preserve or disclose” such data to “comply with applicable laws or regulations.”
While such development may be shocking to some people, other observers have noted that they somehow expected this to happen.
WeChat, which currently has over 662 million mobile users, is owned and developed by billion-dollar internet giant Tencent.