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Reading: Meta to pay $725 million to settle Cambridge Analytica lawsuit
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Home » Meta to pay $725 million to settle Cambridge Analytica lawsuit
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Meta to pay $725 million to settle Cambridge Analytica lawsuit

Published: December 24, 2022
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Meta, Facebook’s parent company, will pay $725 million to settle a class-action lawsuit filed in 2018. Following Facebook’s revelation that 87 million users’ data had been improperly shared with Cambridge Analytica, tied to former President Donald Trump’s election campaign, a lawsuit was filed.

Cambridge Analytica obtained Facebook user data through an app developed by a third party. The “This is Your Digital Life” app was downloaded by only 270,000 Facebook users, but its permissions allowed it to access their friends’ data. The developer passed the 87 million-user dataset on to Cambridge Analytica, contravening Facebook’s terms of service. Many of the people in the dataset had not granted the consultancy firm permission to access their data.

Reports from The New York Times and The Observer revealed in 2018 that Cambridge Analytica still had copies of the data despite the UK-based firm telling Facebook it would delete it back in 2015. The unauthorized data sharing came to light in 2018. In May 2018, Cambridge Analytica filed for bankruptcy after determining it was no longer viable to continue operating the business.”

Other instances of problematic data-sharing practices by Facebook were added to the lawsuit against Meta. According to the lawsuit, Facebook gave “numerous third parties access to their Facebook content and information without their consent, [and] failed to adequately monitor their access and use of that information.”

Meta admits to no wrongdoing or illegal activity by settling the case. Instead, the company says the $725 million agreement, which must still be approved by a judge, is “in the overall interest of our community and shareholders,” a Meta spokesperson told Reuters. This settlement covers 280 million Facebook users. With the plaintiffs’ attorneys taking 25 percent, $725 million is going to be spread awfully thin.

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