Facebook lawyer says users ‘have no expectation of privacy’
Facebook
lawyer says users ‘have no expectation of privacy’
“There is no invasion of privacy at all, because there is no privacy.”
Mikael Thalen—
May 31 at 7:23AM
According to Law360,
Facebook attorney Orin Snyder made the comment while defending the company
against a class-action lawsuit over the Cambridge Analytica scandal.
“There is no invasion of privacy at all,
because there is no privacy,” Snyder said.
In an attempt to have the lawsuit thrown
out, Snyder further claimed that Facebook was nothing more than a “digital
town square” where users voluntarily give up their private information.
“You have to closely guard something to
have a reasonable expectation of privacy,” Snyder added.
Although Snyder said that the social media
site would be focusing more on privacy in the future, U.S. District Court
Judge Vince Chhabria reportedly pushed back on Facebook’s argument.
“What you are
saying now sounds contrary to the message that Facebook itself disseminates
about privacy,” Chhabria said, according to Law.com.
The Daily Dot reached out to Facebook for
comment but did not receive a reply.
Synder’s statement came just hours before
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg told company shareholders during their annual
meeting Thursday that Facebook would become a “privacy-focused social
platform.”
The meeting,
held at Hotel Nia in Palo Alto, California, was also met with protest by
civil liberties groups calling for the CEO’s firing.
A proposal at the meeting to have
Zuckerberg step down as CEO was voted down, however, given that the Facebook
co-founder currently controls the majority of voting shares.
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