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WhatsApp founder Brian Acton, that contacted individuals to remove Facebook last March at the elevation of the social networks giant's data violation rumor, called himself a "sellout" today for accepting Facebook Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg's $22 billion offer to acquire his business in 2014.

" I sold my users' personal privacy to a larger advantage," Acton stated in an interview with Forbes released Wednesday. "I chose and also a concession. And I deal with that on a daily basis."

Acton, that co-founded the messaging service alongside Jan Koum, suddenly left Facebook in September 2017 under uncertain conditions. The choice cost Acton concerning $850 countless Facebook supply alternatives that had not vested at the time of his exit.

Koum also left Facebook earlier this year amidst supposed disagreements over Facebook's cybersecurity methods as well as prepare for WhatsApp. The co-founders of Instagram, which is likewise had by Facebook, left the firm this week over supposedly differing visions for the photo-sharing application.

Acton said he chose not to pursue a settlement with Facebook partly due to the fact that the social media giant asked him to authorize a nondisclosure contract during preliminary negotiations.

Facebook received prevalent objection last March after several records exposed the individual data of as several as 87 million individuals was subjected without authorization by Cambridge Analytica, a British data analytics company that was active throughout the 2016 political election cycle. The discovery led Congressional leaders to contact Zuckerberg as well as Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg to respond to concerns concerning the website's information methods at a collection of public hearings.

Hours after the Cambridge Analytica information violation ended up being public knowledge, Acton created on Twitter that "it is time" to delete Facebook, the firm that made him a billionaire.

Acton informed Forbes that his decision to leave Facebook came in the middle of clashes with the company's management, consisting of Zuckerberg, about just how to monetize WhatsApp. Facebook officials supposedly pressed for WhatsApp to include targeted marketing to expand earnings.

The WhatsApp founder additionally provided something of a protection of the social media giant, noting that Facebook "isn't the bad guy."

"I think of them as simply great businessmen," he said.