Data Privacy Lawsuit Could Cost Meta $90m
Facebook parent agrees to pay $90M to settle decade-old data privacy lawsuit
Lawsuits can clarify how cybersecurity failures, breach evidence, and data-protection duties affect liability and organizational risk.
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Background for this topic.
A lawsuit is a court proceeding in which one party seeks a legal remedy from another. In information security, cases may allege inadequate protection of personal data, unauthorized access or use of systems, misuse of intellectual property, breach of a security contract, or failure to meet privacy obligations. A lawsuit is distinct from regulatory enforcement, although the same incident can lead to both.
For security practitioners, litigation can make operational records and technical evidence important. Organizations may need to preserve logs, alerts, system images, tickets, configurations, policies, and incident timelines in a reliable, access-controlled form; altering or routinely deleting relevant data can undermine fact-finding. Claims may also examine whether safeguards, vulnerability remediation, access controls, breach decisions, privacy disclosures, and supplier oversight matched documented risks and contractual duties. Clear control ownership and contemporaneous incident records therefore support both defense and accurate accountability, subject to applicable legal requirements.
Facebook parent agrees to pay $90M to settle decade-old data privacy lawsuit
Meta Platforms has agreed to pay $90 million to settle a lawsuit over the company's use of cookies to allegedly track Facebook users' internet activity even after they had logged off from the platform
The US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) said today that it will take legal action against Voice-over-Internet Protocol (VoIP) service providers who do not hand over information requested during robocall investigations. [...]
Reviews site claims firm has ignored its enforcement action