World

Facebook agrees to settle 87 mil user data breach suit

Cambridge Analytica trumps platform for 2018 case involving Donald Trump’s campaign

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 28 Aug 2022 11:02AM

Facebook agrees to settle 87 mil user data breach suit
Social media giant Facebook has submitted a draft of settlement in relation to its class action suit involving the breach of data of 87 million users. – AFP pic, August 28, 2022

WASHINGTON – Facebook has reached a preliminary agreement in a long-running suit seeking damages from the social network for allowing third parties, including the company Cambridge Analytica, to access users’ private data.

According to a document filed Friday in a San Francisco court, Facebook says it is submitting a draft “agreement in principle” and has requested a stay of proceedings for 60 days finalise it.

The social network did not indicate the amount or terms of the agreement in the class action.

When asked by AFP, Facebook’s parent company Meta did not respond yesterday.

The deal comes as Meta boss Mark Zuckerberg and former chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg, who announced her resignation in June, were due to testify in court in September as part of the scandal.

In a suit initiated in 2018, Facebook users accused the social network of violating privacy rules by sharing their data with third parties including the firm Cambridge Analytica, which was linked to Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign.

Cambridge Analytica, which has since shut down, had collected and exploited, without their consent, the personal data of 87 million Facebook users, to which the platform had given it access.

This information was allegedly used to develop software steering US voters in favour of Trump.

In 2019, federal authorities fined Facebook US$5 billion (RM22.34 billion) for misleading its users and imposed independent oversight of its personal data management.

Since the Cambridge Analytica scandal broke, Facebook has removed access to its data from thousands of apps suspected of abusing it, restricted the amount of information available to developers in general, and made it easier for users to calibrate restrictions on personal data sharing. – AFP, August 28, 2022

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