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Appeals judges will allow $9.5M Facebook privacy settlement

Posted on February 28, 2013July 1, 2025 by Dissent

Joe Mullin writes:

Internet privacy lawsuits, especially of the class-action variety, have been sprouting up everywhere in the past few years. Some of them have been settled for considerable sums, especially when companies are sued over publicly acknowledged privacy screw-ups that they’ve already taken heat for. One of the most notable was the $9.5 million Facebook settlement over its Beacon program, which broadcast users’ activities from other websites—including what they bought on various shopping sites—in their Facebook news feed.

The number of Facebook users affected by that class-action case was huge—the class was determined to be 3.6 million users at the end of the day. In part due to the large class, the judge allowed a so-called cy pres award, which is when a payment is made to a charity related to the issues in the case rather than to the actual class members. The Facebook settlement will go to a newly created Digital Trust Foundation (DTF), which will fund initiatives related to Internet privacy. $2.3 million of the settlement money will go to fees for the plaintiffs’ attorneys.

Read more ab0ut how some conservative judges in the Ninth Circuit are not happy as to how the cy pres award was made on Ars Technica. All Facebook also has more on this as does the Connecticut Law Tribune.

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