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Australia Facebook Privacy

Australia Sues Facebook Over Its Use of Onavo To Snoop (techcrunch.com) 28

Australia's Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) is suing Facebook over its use, in 2016 and 2017, of the Onavo VPN app to spy on users for commercial purposes. From a report: The ACCC's case accuses Facebook of false, misleading or deceptive conduct toward thousands of Australian consumers, after it had promoted the Onavo Protect app -- saying it would keep users personal activity data private, protected and secret and not use it for any other purpose, when it was being used to gather data to help Facebook's business. "Through Onavo Protect, Facebook was collecting and using the very detailed and valuable personal activity data of thousands of Australian consumers for its own commercial purposes, which we believe is completely contrary to the promise of protection, secrecy and privacy that was central to Facebook's promotion of this app," said ACCC chair Rod Sims in a statement. "Consumers often use VPN services because they care about their online privacy, and that is what this Facebook product claimed to offer. In fact, Onavo Protect channelled significant volumes of their personal activity data straight back to Facebook."
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Australia Sues Facebook Over Its Use of Onavo To Snoop

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Big tech needs to be torn down, they're more powerful than nations, they have better propaganda, they control the flow of almost all information to the masses. They give life to conspiracies and fear mongering that would make ww2 Germany envious of.

    They control so many aspects of our lives, and all needed to get in return to allow them this power was minor conveniences and disposable trinkets.

    • They give life to conspiracies and fear mongering that would make ww2 Germany envious of.

      So do anonymous cowards on slashdot.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        you must be an internet relic from back when slashdot was relevant too.

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      Saying "they're more powerful than nations" is a significant overstatement, though there are areas where that is true.

  • by bazmail ( 764941 ) on Wednesday December 16, 2020 @12:08PM (#60837846)
    Chuck another federal charge on the barbee mate! G'day
  • ... and recomended it, until its final demise.

    I do not know about Australian people, but I'd rather be snooped up by Facebook* than be snooped AND censored by the authoritarian government of my country.

    So, while Onavo may have been a curse for some, it was a blessing for many others.

    JM2C, YMMV

    * who know already a big deal about me, because I willingly told them

  • On one hand FB was caught doing the very thing it said it wouldn't do. On the other hand, it's whining that Apple's changes to data gathering might hurt small businesses.

    It's almost as if Zuck is talking out his ass.
  • by Otis B. Dilroy III ( 2110816 ) on Wednesday December 16, 2020 @02:24PM (#60838488)
    This behaviour by big tech could be dealt with by criminalizing it.

    Right now these cases have to grind through the civil system and result in fines that look good in the headlines but are really a nit to the bad actors running big tech.

    If you criminalize these behaviours with mandatory minimum jail sentences and mandatory minimum fines, it could go a long way towards dealing with corporate malfeasance .

    We need to go from the current situation where:

    I hack Apple and I go to jail
    Apple steals my personal info and they get fined

    to

    I hack Apple and I go to jail
    Apple steals my personal info and they go to jail. They means the CEO, the chairman of the board, and the board itself. Not some patsy that Apple sets up to take the fall.

    Of course, this would be difficult to implement in the current envionment where the US government is for sale to the highest bidder.

    Maybe the EU will catch on. One can only hope.

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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