It has been a year of lawsuits for Facebook, WhatsApp, Instagram, and, more recently, Threads’s parent company, Meta.
In 2023 alone, the Tech behemoth has had to cough up interest on a $725 million settlement, while tackling a revived class action lawsuit from its shareholders. Adding to its list of woes, the company faced a
Barely two months after locking horns with the U.S. government, the adtech giant is again in the crosshairs of major legal action. This time, a group representing 83 Spanish media outlets holds the gun.
As reported by
The AMI newspaper publishing association is the group responsible for this lawsuit. Their argument holds that Meta can offer highly personalized ads to users because the company taps into massive banks of personal data from its daughter companies (Facebook, Instagram, & WhatsApp). The newspapers claim that this results in unfair competition and highlights Meta’s “systematic non-compliance” with the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). This, the association maintains, has been a constant violation dating back to May 2018-when the regulation was first enforced-that should attract appropriate compensation—$600 million worth.
Must suck to be Mark Zuckerberg right now, ey?
Well, maybe not too much, seeing as the California-based social media giant reported profits of
While the Meta camp may have enough reason to be all-smiles for now, new lawsuit regardless, the eventual ruling could be the start of an onslaught that would hit Meta across Europe- turning those smiles upside down. Nicolas Gonzalez Cuellar, a lawyer with the Spanish newspapers, told
This is not the first time Meta has been required to “pay for news.” On Jun 15, 2023, the Canadian parliament passed the
While the Meta leadership is still locked in a battle of wits with the Canadian government, we’re curious to see how they deal with this new class-action-sized curve ball.
Meta retains its position on HackerNoon’s
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