This analysis describes what Whatnot's agreement states, permits, or reserves. It does not constitute a legal determination about enforceability. Regulatory applicability and practical outcomes may vary by jurisdiction, enforcement context, and individual circumstances. Read our methodology
Sellers are subject to a materially broader data collection regime than ordinary users, encompassing sensitive government-issued identifiers and documents.
Interpretive note: The excerpt ends with 'identification documents and information...' indicating truncation; additional data types named in the full clause are not captured here.
The updated terms establish mandatory arbitration as the exclusive dispute resolution mechanism for influencers, replacing direct court access in California and Australia. Under the revised language, any dispute with Whatnot must proceed through arbitration under the main Terms of Service, which includes a class action waiver. This means influencers cannot bring class or collective claims and cannot access court proceedings except where the main Terms of Service explicitly permits. The practical effect is that individual influencers seeking to resolve disagreements with Whatnot over payments, account suspension, content disputes, or contractual interpretation must use arbitration rather than litigation.
View change record →The updated terms establish a formal Creator Program for Australian users that defines how creators can submit content for potential monetary or credit rewards. Creators grant Whatnot a one-year, non-exclusive, worldwide license to use submitted videos across paid and organic social media, television, and other platforms, while retaining ownership of the original content. The terms require creators to clearly disclose any material connection to Whatnot, including consideration or free products received, in a form specified by Whatnot and compliant with Australian advertising standards and the AANA Code of Ethics.
View change record →Australian sellers using Whatnot are now required to resolve all disputes through arbitration rather than through Australian courts. The updated terms state that disputes will be resolved exclusively under the main Terms of Service arbitration provisions, removing the previous option to bring legal action in Los Angeles courts or pursue jury trials. The terms no longer include language allowing court proceedings, except where the main Terms of Service expressly permit.
View change record →If you sell on Whatnot, you must provide sensitive personal identification information — including your tax identification number, date of birth, and identification documents — that Whatnot will collect.
How other platforms handle this
If you are an individual user, we collect, use, transfer, disclose and store any personal Data you provide to us in accordance with our privacy policy, (available on our website), and Applicable Privacy Laws.
As you interact with our Website, we may automatically collect Technical Data and Usage Data about your equipment, browsing actions and patterns...by using cookies, server logs and other similar technologies.
NIM container releases that collect data, collect it for the following purposes: (a) to properly configure and optimize products for use with Software; and (b) to improve NVIDIA products and services.
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"If you are a seller, we will collect additional identification information from you, including your tax identification number (e.g., social security number or local equivalent), date of birth, identification documents and information...— Excerpt from Whatnot's Whatnot Terms of Service
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Sellers are subject to a materially broader data collection regime than ordinary users, encompassing sensitive government-issued identifiers and documents.
If you sell on Whatnot, you must provide sensitive personal identification information — including your tax identification number, date of birth, and identification documents — that Whatnot will collect.
ConductAtlas has identified this type of provision across 298 platforms. See the full comparison.
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