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Facebook The Courts

US Supreme Court Rebuffs Facebook Appeal In User Tracking Lawsuit (reuters.com) 23

The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday turned away Facebook's bid to pare back a $15 billion class action lawsuit accusing the company of illegally tracking the activities of internet users even when they are logged out of the social media platform. Reuters reports: The justices declined to hear Facebook's appeal of a lower court ruling that revived the proposed nationwide litigation accusing the company of violating a federal law called the Wiretap Act by secretly tracking the visits of users to websites that use Facebook features such as the "like" button. The litigation also accuses the company of violating the privacy rights of its users under California law but Facebook's appeal to the Supreme Court involved only the Wiretap Act.

Four individuals filed the proposed nationwide class action lawsuit in California federal court seeking $15 billion in damages for Menlo Park, California-based Facebook's actions between April 2010 and September 2011. The company stopped its nonconsensual tracking after it was exposed by a researcher in 2011, court papers said. Facebook said it protects the privacy of its users and should not have to face liability over commonplace computer-to-computer communications. Facebook has more than 2.4 billion users worldwide, including more than 200 million in the United States.

The case centers on Facebook's use of features called "plug-ins" that third-parties often incorporate into their websites to track the browsing histories of users. Along with digital files called "cookies" that can help identify internet users, the plaintiffs accused Facebook of packaging this tracked data and selling it to advertisers for profit. Facebook said it uses the data it receives to tailor the content it shows its users and to improve ads on its service. [...] In its appeal to the Supreme Court, Facebook said it is not liable under the Wiretap Act because it is a party to the communications at issue by virtue of its plug-ins.

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US Supreme Court Rebuffs Facebook Appeal In User Tracking Lawsuit

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  • Maybe we can nail them all... including the ISPs

  • You mean that's why they had me include a 14KB javascript file on my website in order to show a simple 'Like' button? =)

  • Not very newsworthy (Score:5, Informative)

    by Xenographic ( 557057 ) on Monday March 22, 2021 @04:32PM (#61186762) Journal

    This is just a denial of a grant of a writ of certiorari on whether some claim can proceed as a matter of law. The Supreme Court routinely denies requests like this and it's generally only noteworthy when they grant cert, because that indicates that they have something to say on the subject.

    It doesn't tell us much about the merits of the underlying case, which will continue on its way through the lower courts. If cert had been granted, the Supreme Court might have shut this whole thing down, but denying the writ of certiorari is the fate of most petitions.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      This is just a denial of a grant of a writ of certiorari on whether some claim can proceed as a matter of law. The Supreme Court routinely denies requests like this and it's generally only noteworthy when they grant cert, because that indicates that they have something to say on the subject.

      It doesn't tell us much about the merits of the underlying case, which will continue on its way through the lower courts. If cert had been granted, the Supreme Court might have shut this whole thing down, but denying the

  • FTFA:

    Facebook said it protects the privacy of its users

    Funny how these corporations don't see their own possession of your data as invading your privacy. They claim that your privacy is invaded only if it goes beyond them, or at least that is the attitude they want you to take. They want you to think: "It's OK, only Facebook knows everything I do and it goes no further than them".

    Of course it does go further because they sell it, to companies that also claim it will go no further. But that is beside the point here because FB are flatly denying they sel

    • by Agripa ( 139780 )

      Funny how these corporations don't see their own possession of your data as invading your privacy. They claim that your privacy is invaded only if it goes beyond them, or at least that is the attitude they want you to take.

      Notice how when *they* lose something, it is *your* data, privacy, or money, which is lost.

Somebody ought to cross ball point pens with coat hangers so that the pens will multiply instead of disappear.

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