On mySimon: Dc Shoes Court Graffik Skate Shoe Kids
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

By Steven Musil CNET News
Posted on ZDNet News: Aug 18, 2009 4:52:47 AM

A group of Facebook users filed a civil lawsuit Monday that alleges the social-networking site is violating California consumer privacy laws.

The lawsuit, which was filed in California's Orange County Superior Court on behalf of five users, seeks a jury trial, as well as damages and attorneys' fees. The five plaintiffs are described as two children younger than 13, a user of the original Facebook, a professional photographer, and an actress and model.

The 40-page complaint accuses the Palo Alto, Calif.-based company of violating California privacy and online privacy laws by disseminating private information to third parties for commercial purposes.

"Plaintiffs and the general public desire and expect a level of privacy, which Facebook has failed to satisfy under its current policies, procedures, practices, and technology," the complaint states.

A Facebook spokesman declined to comment on the specifics of the lawsuit other than to say, "We see no merit to this suit and we plan to fight it."

The plaintiffs' attorney did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Facebook is no stranger to privacy controversy. In July, an investigation by Canada's privacy commissioner suggested Facebook is unconcerned with members' privacy and called on it to do more. Commissioner Jennifer Stoddart expressed concern that while it's easy for members to deactivate their accounts, it's less clear on how to actually delete them. Facebook could therefore retain member data from deactivated accounts for an indefinite period of time in violation of Canadian privacy law.

The social network went through a user backlash over the introduction of its News Feed in 2006, and a bigger one over the controversial Beacon advertising program. More recently, a revision to Facebook's terms of use prompted consumer advocacy blog The Consumerist to highlight language that it said meant that Facebook claimed ownership of user profile data and photos.

This article was originally published on CNET News.

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 16 Talkback(s)
RE: Facebook hit by user-privacy lawsuit
If you put private details in a public place for all to see what do you expect.If it could come back to bite you dont post it!Never use exact date of birth could be harvested and used with other details,when they become available for identity theft in the future.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: ronangel Posted on: 09/10/09 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
What a crock!  IT_Guy_z | 08/18/09
utility, shopping and bank accounts  dgrainge | 08/20/09
Rather thick line between social networking and banking, sorry.  AzuMao | 09/10/09
RE: Facebook hit by user-privacy lawsuit  Steven J. Ackerman | 08/18/09
Stolen passwd is not hacking  wapi | 08/19/09
RE: Facebook hit by user-privacy lawsuit  Jessica4321 | 08/18/09
I disagree  Etch44 | 08/20/09
RE: Facebook hit by user-privacy lawsuit  TrueDinosaur | 08/18/09
RE: Facebook hit by user-privacy lawsuit  WAW5058 | 08/19/09
The logical extension of this theory...  Tom-Tech | 09/10/09
Let this be a warning, then.  sobeita | 08/19/09
RE: Facebook hit by user-privacy lawsuit  sawconfusion | 08/19/09
RE: Facebook hit by user-privacy lawsuit  christopher@... | 09/10/09
RE: Facebook hit by user-privacy lawsuit  mmeade@... | 09/10/09
RE: Facebook hit by user-privacy lawsuit  jjwalters3@... | 09/10/09
RE: Facebook hit by user-privacy lawsuit  ronangel | 09/10/09

What do you think?

advertisement
Click Here
advertisement
Click Here

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

SmartPlanet

Click Here