Judge Dismisses WhatsApp Whistleblower Retaliation Claims
Key Vocabulary
Listening
Judge Dismisses WhatsApp Whistleblower Retaliation Claims
Attaullah Baig, who had been a senior security leader at WhatsApp, filed a federal suit that described broad internal access to private messages. The complaint alleges that about 1,500 engineers could access user data and that roughly 100,000 accounts were being compromised every day; it also forms part of a parallel class action that seeks to represent at least three billion WhatsApp users. Those claims were presented as violations of privacy and of internal control rules for public companies.
U.S. Magistrate Judge Laurel Beeler reviewed the whistleblower retaliation claims and found they failed to meet the legal standard under Section 806 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. The judge determined that Baig had not plausibly shown a reasonable belief that he had reported securities or wire fraud, and dismissed most individual claims without prejudice. The court did note that one targeted claim against WhatsApp vice president Nitin Gupta might have been pleaded with enough detail to survive.
The filings show Baig filed an OSHA complaint in January 2025 and says he was fired the following month; he seeks reinstatement, back pay and damages. Meta has rejected the allegations and described the assertions as meritless. The complaint requests internal documents, access logs and related records that would be central to proving whether employees could view message content.
If Baig can allege more specific facts or produce corroborating records, he may be able to amend his complaint and pursue some claims. The court's dismissal left open procedural options, and the complaint's detailed requests for logs, task records and communications mean discovery could be decisive if the suit advances.
Quiz
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Discussion
Do you worry about employees at big companies being able to see private messages? How does that make you feel?
Have you ever needed proof to show a company how a problem affected you? What did you do?
What do you think would make you trust a messaging app more?
Would you be willing to pay more for an app if it had stronger privacy checks? Why or why not?
How would you explain the idea of 'discovery' to a friend who is not a lawyer?