Bengaluru, Aug. 13 -- Social media platform WhatsApp told the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) on Tuesday that sharing basic account details and generic user preferences with Meta cannot be regarded as a violation of users' right to privacy. Senior counsel Mukul Rohatgi, who appeared for WhatsApp, told NCLAT that the only information WhatsApp which too is owned by Meta, shares with the latter, is "generic, non-content data" inferred from "user interactions" with businesses on the platform, such as an "interest in luxury cars, frequent restaurant engagement, or regular travel." Rohatgi argued that WhatsApp merely tells Meta how many times a user goes to a restaurant but not what they eat. It tells Meta how many times a counsel...