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Meta Allows EU Users to Access Instagram, Facebook, Messenger Separately to Comply With Regulations


By - 23 Jan 2024 03:54 PM
"Users in the European Union, European Economic Area, and Switzerland will be able to disable information sharing across all of Facebook parent company Meta's apps. Residents in these areas will therefore be able to use Facebook and Instagram independently, even if they are linked on the network. In the meanwhile, Meta is going to alter the way messaging functions on its Marketplace platform and enable users to create a Messenger account that is separate from their Facebook account. Users in the EU, EEA, and Switzerland who have already linked their Facebook and Instagram accounts can keep using them or unlink them ""so that their information is no longer used across accounts,"" according to a detailed post from the company outlining the changes being made to comply with regulations — the EU's Digital Markets Act (DMA) — that Meta and other businesses must comply with. A month after cross-app chats between Instagram and Messenger were disabled, Meta made its announcement. Three years after CEO Mark Zuckerberg declared that Meta would enable cross-platform chat, the company restricted messaging to individual platforms. In December, it also enabled support for Messenger's end-to-end encrypted (E2EE) chats. "