The Delhi High Court has been presented with a petition challenging WhatsApp’s recent update, which has whipped up major privacy and security concerns among the platform’s two billion global users.
The petition argues that the new policy violates users' privacy rights under India's Constitution.
In its second hearing on Monday, the court said that it's not mandatory for people to download WhatsApp if privacy concerns bother them.
"It is not mandatory to download WhatsApp on your mobile and it is voluntary. If you want to choose not to download WhatsApp, you can," the court said.
The statement by Delhi High Court’s legal bench – headed by Justice Sanjeev Sachdeva – falls in line with his previous statement last week, when he suggested people shouldn't use the app if they don't agree with the platform’s policies.
Last week, India’s federal Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) wrote to WhatsApp’s Global CEO Will Cathcart, suggesting that the app withdraw the proposed privacy policy updates for its 400 million Indian users, given that the country is its largest global market.
Meanwhile, WhatsApp has delayed its latest policy update by three months.
The app has also released an official blog post explaining how it doesn't keep track of any messages, calls, or locations exchanged between users on private chats.