Messaging platform WhatsApp this week announced plans to take legal action against individuals and companies that abuse the platform for bulk messaging.
The Facebook-owned platform’s Terms of Service already prohibit automated or bulk messaging, as WhatsApp says it wasn’t designed for such use, although it does provide companies with the WhatsApp Business app and the WhatsApp Business API to help them manage customer interactions.
In a whitepaper (PDF) published at the beginning of the year, the platform provided information on its ability to identify and ban accounts, which helps it keep users safe from abuse.
The on-platform information available within WhatsApp has already allowed Facebook to find and stop millions of abusive accounts from operating on the service, the company says.
Nonetheless, there are companies that attempt to evade WhatsApp’s machine learning systems, despite Facebook’s efforts to improve them.
The company’s efforts will also involve taking legal action against individuals or companies linked to on-platform evidence of such abuse.
Such off-platform information would include public claims from companies about their ability to leverage WhatsApp in such manners that violate the company’s policies.
“This serves as notice that we will take legal action against companies for which we only have off-platform evidence of abuse if that abuse continues beyond December 7, 2019, or if those companies are linked to on-platform evidence of abuse before that date,” WhatsApp also says.
The platform will continue to use its right to enforce rules through technology, including banning accounts based on machine-learning classifiers.
However, the platform will continue to offer the WhatsApp Business app and WhatsApp Business API to provide companies with the ability to communicate with their customers.
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