Facebook is facing a class action lawsuit over allegations that it monitors users’ private messages.
The lawsuit claims that when users share a link to another website
via a private message, Facebook scans it to profile the sender’s web
activity.
It alleges that Facebook systematically intercepts messages to mine
user data and profits by sharing it with data aggregators, advertisers
and marketers.
Facebook said the allegations were “without merit”.
“We will defend ourselves vigorously,” the world’s biggest social networking site added.
The lawsuit is claiming the greater of either $100 (£61) a day for each day of alleged violations or $10,000, for each user.
Facebook has positioned itself to acquire pieces of the users’ profiles that are likely unavailable to other data aggregators”
The lawsuit, filed earlier this week, cites independent research
that, it claims, found Facebook reviews the contents of its users’
private messages “for purposes unrelated to the facilitation of message
transmission”.
“Representing to users that the content of Facebook messages is
“private” creates an especially profitable opportunity for Facebook,” it
says.
It says this is “because users who believe they are communicating on a
service free from surveillance are likely to reveal facts about
themselves that they would not reveal had they known the content was
being monitored.
“Thus, Facebook has positioned itself to acquire pieces of the users’
profiles that are likely unavailable to other data aggregators.”
However, others have come forward to defend Facebook.
Writing on his blog, security expert Graham Cluley said that if the
site was not examining links shared privately, Facebook would be failing
a “duty of care” to its users.
“If you didn’t properly scan and check links there’s a very real risk
that spam, scams, phishing attacks, and malicious URLs designed to
infect recipients’ computers with malware could run rife,” he argued.
Facebook has come under attack over its privacy policies in the past.
In September last year, it faced criticism over a proposed change to
its privacy policy which would have allowed ads to be created using the
names and profile pictures of Facebook users.
The firm had claimed that its proposal merely clarified the language
of its privacy policy, rather than making any material changes to it.
Facebook undertook to change the wording in the wake of a legal
action launched in 2011 which saw it pay $20m to compensate users who
claimed it had used their data without explicit permission
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