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Facebook Businesses Communications Privacy Social Networks The Courts

Federal Judge: Facebook Must Face Suit For Scanning Messages 48

Rambo Tribble writes U.S. District Court Judge Phyllis Hamilton on Tuesday denied Facebook's bid to dismiss a class-action lawsuit against the social media giant for violating users' privacy through the scanning of message content. In her rejection of Facebook's argument, the judge said the firm had, "...not offered a sufficient explanation of how the challenged practice falls within the ordinary course of its business."
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Federal Judge: Facebook Must Face Suit For Scanning Messages

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  • Mining your privacy is Facebook's entire business.

    Judge seems a bit dense. ;)

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by koan ( 80826 )

      No the users of Facebook are the dense ones.

      • What about Gmail and their ilk? Don't users assume that messages are private in the same sense as users on Facebook sending private messages, that only the recipient reads them?
        • What about Gmail and their ilk? Don't users assume that messages are private in the same sense as users on Facebook sending private messages, that only the recipient reads them?

          May be, but targeting Facebook first may just be a matter of strategy.

          Facebook resells a lot of the information it gathers from its users, a lot more than Google does. I'm not saying that Google is less evil than Facebook, but if they're doing the same thing as Facebook, Google is lot better at keeping this kind of private information to itself.

        • by tsa ( 15680 )

          Indeed. I never understood why many nerds, who are usually very sensitive about privacy, ran to Google's browser in droves.

          • Have there ever been any instances of Google sending themselves your browsing data without your explicit permission through Chrome? (Not through their web sites which are accessible on any browser.) I've been keeping away from Chrome for my own reasons, mainly the plugin infrastructure and lack of customization options. However, as Firefox continues to bloat and mirror Chrome in UI, I've been thinking I might as well go for the faster browser. If there are actual privacy violations in Chrome I'd like to kno
          • Chrome doesn't read your emails and what personal information the browser does "phone home" to Google can be disabled if you so wish. The scanning of emails for ad targeting is done server-side for Gmail; still, if you replace "Google's browser" with "Gmail" then you'd have a statement I'd probably agree with. Personally I don't mind my email being checked by an algorithm to generate keywords for advertising; the keywords are only used while that specific email is open on-screen, so it's not like Google is
  • by Anonymous Coward

    .......not offered a sufficient explanation of how the challenged practice falls within the ordinary course of its business.

    Hello! They are an advertising company! The more data they can get about their suck...users, the more they know and can target ads. The Dark Side of Big Data!

    D'Uh!

  • by lucm ( 889690 ) on Thursday December 25, 2014 @01:55PM (#48672725)

    1) var x = how many Likes someone is getting

    2) var y = how often people bitch about that person in private messages

    3) Ratio of Candy Crush ads for that person = y/x

    There, FB now has a sufficient explanation.

  • Is it a challenge to (what I think is) Facebook utilising some sort of behavioural analysis through deep content inspection?

    Or do they actually have people running specific searches on content posted by specific groups or individuals?

  • Or Yahoo, Microsoft, Twitter...pretty much EVERY email provider scans messages for the purpose of advertising.

    I'm not sure whether 1) this judge is stupid, or 2) there are a whole lot of tech companies in a lot of trouble!

I tell them to turn to the study of mathematics, for it is only there that they might escape the lusts of the flesh. -- Thomas Mann, "The Magic Mountain"

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