Users Sue Google, Facebook, Zynga Over Privacy
Trailrunner7 writes "A raft of class action lawsuits filed in Federal court charge the globe's biggest social networking firms with violating federal communications privacy laws, allowing advertisers to profit from personal information harvested from users. Weeks after the Wall Street Journal blew the whistle on lax data privacy standards on Facebook, a string of class action suits attempt to hold the social networking giant, as well as game company Zynga and Google liable for what the suits contend are lax practices that allow advertisers to harvest personal information on Web users. The suits are seeking monetary damages on behalf of potentially millions of users of the three companies. The suits allege that the users' personal information has been leaked to advertisers and other unauthorized individuals, in violation of the companies' privacy policies and a number of state and federal statues protecting the confidentiality of electronic communications."
Who would have thought that posting something to a vast world wide network could result in many people seeing it? It's getting so you can't shout out your front door without people hearing you. You also can't post secrets on billboards without them being read by passers by. What is the world coming to?
I am the penguin that codes in the night.
No "Users" are suing these companies, Lawyers are suing. No User will gain much benefit from the results of the suit, win or lose, lawyers will.
This is nothing but a get rich quick scheme for Lawyers.
Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
Facebook staff have been amazed to discover that when Facebook passes users' complete details to application developers and advertisers, some of the partner companies might accidentally let slip the information in some manner.
"We are appalled at this information leak," said Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg as he took a break from his personal RSS feed of drunk women's tits posted to his service. "But I can assure you that we have sternly suggested to everyone involved that they take somewhat greater care not to get caught, and maintain a serious demeanor when rolling around in the great big pit filled with money in their basement."
"I'm horrified and outraged," said office worker Brenda Busybody, 43 (IQ), "that stuff I put on the Internet is on the Internet. It violates everything I expect. I want privacy when I'm calling my boss a useless fuckstick to the entire world, all my coworkers and my boss himself. And when I'm playing a bit of FarmVille before we nick off down the pub."
Privacy advocates are working on Diaspora, a security-enhanced social network so far populated by Linux users who cryptographically sign every update about which episode of Babylon 5 they just finished watching alone in their parents' basement. "START PGP KEY BLOCK!" said open source software advocate Hiram Nerdboy, 17. "WE WILL PROTECT YOUR FREEDOMS!" The next version of Diaspora will allow users to list more than three friends, should there be any demand whatsoever for such a feature.
Facebook works on the now-standard "Web 2.0" business model: 1. Brutally sodomise the personal privacy of anyone who comes within a mile of your service and say "hey baby, I'm sorry" every time you're busted. 2. Sell ads.
Image: Abort the fetus, win a Playstation 3!
http://rocknerd.co.uk
state and federal statues protecting the confidentiality of electronic communications.
I knew that the government was full of gargoyles, but I didn't know it was so literal!
Whats that?
Seriously, if you dont want it known, dont put it on the internet.
They chose to give away their information. This is the fault of the user and no one else.
Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
Regardless of the fact that 'things you put on the internet are now public', there is a point that these companies are a little devious in their methods of selling your information. I think mistakes are being made on both sides: users assuming everything is private (I have no idea why), and companies abusing that fact.
I don't think anything will come of this lawsuit except media attention, which will hopefully make users smarten up, thus making this less of an issue.
My $0.02..
So, what are they complaining about? Don't want Facebook to harvest your data - pretty easy problem to solve - DON'T USE FACEBOOK.
Agree to their TOS? Well what do you have to complain about? No one forces anyone to signup for Facebook or to use Google
Take some fucking personal responsibility you god damned nitwits.
In reading TFA there are actually three suits. One against Zynga, one against Zynga and Facebook, and one against Google. The one against Google seems by far the weakest since it alleges that the information that Google anonymizes is being put back togetehr by third parties and then sold. The Zynga and Facebook clims seem to be a straight sale of your personal data. I'd guess the suits against Zynga and Facebook make it further than the one against Google, just because there is a more direct allegation. That plus Google seems to consult with its lawyers before doing things.
If brevity is the soul of wit, then how does one explain Twitter?
Wall Street Journal is part of News Corp, which owns MySpace.
I cannot believe that violating an internal privacy policy is actionable in any way. Perhaps they need to change their policy, but the fact is the policy is something the organization came up with and posted. It is not any binding agreement on the organization with their users.
Anyone that believes there are laws against disclosing information to advertisers needs to have a better understanding of how advertising on the Internet works.
Even if they did successfully sue and win because my data was sold, I will never see a cent of that money. I think that's even worse than selling the info in the first place. Both are horrible. What has this world come to?
No, there is no "-1 I'LL NEVER ADMIT BEING WRONG!!!" mod.
You mean my data is unsafe when dumped into the GIANT ABYSS that we all call the world wide web!?! Get a clue loosers!
The lack of your privacy had always been stated by Facebook, Google, and other companies as far as I know (with the exception of google collecting open-wifi connections). I'm a stickler for privacy but realistically I don't see a reason why anyone has the right to sue a service about privacy when it was stated in their TOA and Privacy Policy to begin with, unless there are certain privacy things that weren't mentioned in it which can be understandable. However, as mentioned many times before, this looks like a ploy to get rich quick for lawyers and I'll bet you anything the coming judge is in on it.
Interestingly enough the newspaper that "blew the whistle" has the same parent company as MySpace, NewsCorp.
The suits are seeking monetary damages on behalf of potentially millions of users of the three companies.
Cool! I'm a user of google and facebook, so if they win, I'll get some mone... oh, wait...
I simply don't understand how this idiotic flood of lawsuits from everyone suing everyone else is still allowed. I mean, has anyone stopped to think of how much time and money is wasted on stupid cases? Not that this subject isn't important but come on, seeking monetary damages on behalf of the users?! WTF?!
It's truly egregious how little Facebook cares for the privacy of what we choose to post on their website. Especially when you consider how much we have to pay to use Facebook. Oh, wait...
If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
Whether you don't read or are retarded, if you accept the terms, you get what you deserve. I mean, what the fuck, people are suing companies just because they're retarded and don't realize how they're paying for their "free" services. Serves them well, I hope they spend lots of $$ in trials. As much as i dislike privacy "invasion", people consent to it and publish all sorts of private details about their lives, so they just deserve to get fucked over.
The bonus part for me is I'm a dual citizen of both the US and Canada and under Canadian law have a constitutional right to Privacy that is continually violated by these guys. And Canada doesn't think Corporations are People. Neither does the EU.
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
Users are largely incidental to the business model we're seeing exposed here.
If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
This is apparently all because HTTP has a referer field (unless the user turns it off in the browser), so clickthroughs on ads have the url you were on when you clicked. FB has lots of urls with user id's in them, which lead to pages with the user's public information, friends, etc. Researchers have already crawled most of these urls without much trouble, but the definition of "giving away private information" seems to have changed a bit under the influence of lawyers.
Nowadays it looks like FB puts ad clickthroughs through a redirect that hides the referer. I suppose the WSJ will discover next that clickthroughs reveal the user's IP address and blame FB for it.
---- "If we have to go on with these damned quantum jumps, then I'm sorry that I ever got involved" - Erwin Schrodinger
Probably not very popular on this board, but...a mass class action of all software users against all software peddlers for offering products in exchange for money that provide absolutely zero warranty as to suitability of purpose and free from glaring defects.
I, for one, would welcome say...a decade... of no new software enhancements in exchange for a decade of security first and bug smashing for what is already out there, just so this sort of warranty could be applied.
Across the board...some company wants money for their product, "licensed" or not, that doesn't matter, they must provide a minimum warranty and guarantee.
Give it away free, OK, you get what you pay for. The minute you want cash in exchange, let's see the guarantee. Same as any other "product". Demand "patents"? For SURE you should be required to offer the warranty if you sell it, lease it, license it.
The EULA smashing law.
Call it a few trillion dollar class action, and I mean against the giants as well. Places like MS wouldn't be worth billions today if they had to actually work HARD (spend those profits on code review that would make Y2K look like a quickie 15 minute review) to make their products actually secure and suitable for use on the internet. Not to single them out, other big names like Adobe, etc. All of them. And I wouldn't care if it meant a total review of the entire way software is written, compiled, languages used, any of it. It was thrown out there decades ago as very exotic, so they got a lot of slack, but today, software is a well established zillion dollar big business, they should be treated at least with as much consumer warranty type regulation as any other "Product" out there.
I can hear it now "It can't be done" "software would cost a million a copy" and other sorts of rubbish. I don't believe it. When the alternative is drudge work outside for cheap pay harvesting lettuce, or climate controlled sit on your keister and type, for a little bit better money..I know what guys who can type would pick, even if they dropped from six figures to low five figures a year salary, and the price of software reflected what it was worth, not what can be gouged out and foisted on the population because of EULAs and vendor lockin.
It has been quite popular that the Hollywood stars cooperate with designers of Christian Audigier to release the clothes series.
Honestly though, the motivation behind this is pure money-making. As if Zuckerberg & Sons needed even MORE money.