Facebook Parent Settles Cambridge Analytica Data Harvesting Scandal For $725 Million

By Tyler Durden

Facebook parent Meta has agreed to settle a class-action lawsuit over the Cambridge Analytica data harvesting scandal for $725 million, or just under 2.5 days of revenue (based on Q3 figures).

To recap – in 2014, Aleksandr Kogan of Cambridge University in the UK built a Facebook app that paid hundreds of thousands of users to take a psychological test. The app harvested not only the data of the test-taker, but the data of their Facebook friends as well. Kogan sold the resulting database of up to 50 million Americans to Cambridge Analytica, which provided analytical assistance to the 2016 presidential campaigns of Ted Cruz and Donald Trump.

Facebook subsequently banned Cambridge Analytica, and in October 2019 agreed to pay the UK a £500,000 fine for exposing user data to a “serious risk of harm.”

The $725 million settlement is the largest in a US data privacy class action, according to the BBC, citing attorneys.

Meta said the settlement was “in the best interest of our community and shareholders,” adding “We look forward to continuing to build services people love and trust with privacy at the forefront.”

As noted above, the settlement is “not that much” to the tech giant, author James Bell tells the BBC.

“It’s less than a tenth of what it spent on its efforts to create ‘the metaverse’ last year alone,” he said, adding “So Meta probably won’t be too unhappy with this deal, but it does stand as a warning to social media companies that mistakes can prove very costly indeed.”

The settlement is subject to approval by a federal judge in San Francisco.

“This historic settlement will provide meaningful relief to the class in this complex and novel privacy case,” said lead lawyers Derek Loeser and Lesley Weaver, in a statement.

The complaint was filed on behalf of a large proposed class of Facebook users, whose personal data on the social network was released to third parties without their consent.

The class size is “in the range of 250-280 million” people, according to the ruling document, representing all Facebook users in the US during the “class period” which runs from 24 May, 2007 to 22 December, 2022.

It is not clear how the plaintiffs would claim their share of the settlement. -BBC

According to privacy and ethics researcher Janis Wong of the Alan Turing institute, the settlement would only amount to ‘two or three dollars’ per person if each affected individual submits a claim.

Source: ZeroHedge

Image: Anthony Freda Art


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