9 comments

  • bilekas 1 hour ago
    > "We will not allow trial lawyers to profit from our platforms while simultaneously claiming they are harmful."

    Wow.. That is quite a statement. Am I right in saying that in order to claim for the class action lawsuit, which facebook has been 'found negligent', that the victims need to take an action collectively in order to claim ? IE They need to be reached somehow to inform them of the possibility ?

    Seems the most obvious place to advertise would be Meta.

    I understand Meta can basically do whatever they like with their ToS but the statement from the Meta spokesperson seems like an extremely bad idea.

    • giancarlostoro 54 minutes ago
      Would be really entertaining if all the lawyers affected banded together and made a class action lawsuit full of lawyers as the plaintiffs.
    • pixl97 15 minutes ago
      Tobacco lawyers "Putting that cigarettes are harmful on the box would be devastating to our profits!"
    • 3form 59 minutes ago
      "Lawyer benefitting from cases about prostitution equals to a pimp" kind of argument.
    • HumblyTossed 49 minutes ago
      The judge should have ordered Meta to place a banner on FB so that everyone can see it and join if they're a victim.
    • bwestergard 1 hour ago
      They wouldn't profit if the cases didn't have merit.
    • boringg 1 hour ago
      I mean those class action lawsuits enrich trial lawyers and maybe force companies to behave better (though i bet empirical evidence would show that its more a cost of business).

      The 20$ dollars people get is nothing but a guise that the trial lawyers are helping people.

      • bilekas 58 minutes ago
        I'm not sure if the lower price means that class actions shouldn't still be taken.

        It's to allow companies to not have to deal with individual claims for each person. I see that the ranges can be substantial though, several thousands, but seems to be criteria.

        > Nearly nine months later, Mark received a notification that his claim had been approved. Two weeks after that, $186 was deposited into his bank account. While the amount wasn’t substantial, it covered a grocery run and a phone bill—and more importantly, it reminded him that companies can be held accountable, even in small ways. [0]

        [0] https://peopleforlaw.com/blog/how-much-do-people-typically-g...

        If the fine's don't dissuade companies from bad practices, the class actions with theoreticaly no upper limit might be a better option to enforce proper behaviour.

    • draw_down 1 hour ago
      [dead]
    • mchusma 47 minutes ago
      You may think Meta is bad. But plaintiff counsel like this are generally the scummiest people in the US. (Maybe not universal, but 90% are morally repugnant).
      • malfist 30 minutes ago
        How do you know that? How could you know that?

        These people are one of the few people holding Meta accountable for their evil acts and because of that you call them "scummiest people in the US"

        That's nonsense.

        • which 21 minutes ago
          If you read the settlements that come out of these lawsuits, you will pretty much always find an 8 to low 9 figure settlement (that the lawyers get a third of), maybe some superficial policy changes, and $12 checks to the supposed victims who only became victims when they randomly got an email telling them they should join the lawsuit. The only people who benefit are the lawyers.
          • malfist 8 minutes ago
            $12 dollars is $12 dollars people wouldn't have without them. You can always opt out of a class action settlement and sue yourself if you're not happy with the terms.

            But at the end of the day, the lawyers did real work, took on real risk and achieved something. They held a big tech company accountable, and that is a meaningful difference from the status quo. I don't care that they made money doing that, they should.

          • reaperducer 16 minutes ago
            The only people who benefit are the lawyers.

            My special savings account where I deposit the settlement checks from the various tech companies that have violated my privacy or other rights disagrees.

            Sometimes it's 43¢. Sometimes it's $400.

            In the last three years, I've put… checking… $5,351.83 in that account because tech companies think laws and morals don't apply to them.

            Saying that these lawsuits only benefit lawyers is both false and yet another lazy tech bubble cliche.

            Yes, the lawyers get way more than I do. They also did 99% the work, so I don't hold it against them.

            Just read the newspaper. Every time you see an article about one of these suits, check it out to see if it applies to you.

            • nslsm 12 minutes ago
              Hey at least you get to pocket all of that. Here in Europe the government keeps the money and then distributes it to the scum of the Earth. I'd rather give the money to lawyers, at least they did _something_.
              • duskdozer 4 minutes ago
                >distributes it to the scum of the Earth

                Who?

        • raw_anon_1111 11 minutes ago
          And the lawyers will make millions and the people will make nothing. Facebook won’t make any significant revenue affecting changes.
        • dec0dedab0de 25 minutes ago
          There are many lawyers that gather up victims for class action payouts and take most of the money for themselves.

          They don't even bother trying to get more when they can, because they're just bottom feeding.

      • reaperducer 20 minutes ago
        You may think Meta is bad. But plaintiff counsel like this are generally the scummiest people in the US. (Maybe not universal, but 90% are morally repugnant).

        As they say, "95% of lawyers give the remaining 5% a bad name."

        At the same time, 99% of social networks give the remaining 1% a bad name.

  • mrwh 1 hour ago
    Meta wants to be an impartial platform only and exactly when it suits them to be.
    • zeroonetwothree 23 minutes ago
      I think there’s a clear difference in restricting advertising vs organic posts.
      • thimabi 13 minutes ago
        Meta does both. It has long been said that businesses have little organic reach in Meta’s platforms, as an incentive for them to use ads.
      • HWR_14 19 minutes ago
        What difference is that?
    • tiberius_p 1 hour ago
      That's exactly what they're saying.
    • kotaKat 55 minutes ago
      I mean, they spun up a bullshit "Oversight Board" that they can fully 100% choose to ignore and decline to implement their demands when they're made.
    • 2OEH8eoCRo0 42 minutes ago
      Repeal section 230
  • bastard_op 14 minutes ago
    I wonder what would happen posting these ads to truth social and twitter.
  • josefritzishere 14 minutes ago
    So they remove class action lawsuits but not pedos. Got it.
  • pcardoso 52 minutes ago
    Reminds me of Carl Sagan’s Contact, where Haden, the millionaire funding Ellie’s work, made a TV ad blocker and then sued the TV companies when they refused to play ads for his product.

    I wonder if that is what will happen next.

  • HumblyTossed 52 minutes ago
    Do photogs do that on purpose, or does Zuck really always have that sociopath stare?
  • k33n 1 hour ago
    The idea that Meta is obligated to be so impartial that it must allow lawsuits against itself to be promoted on its own platform is a bit naive and utopian.

    Its own TOS states that they won’t allow that.

    • schubidubiduba 1 hour ago
      TOS are not laws. In fact, they often partially violate laws and those parts are then void. In some countries, anything written in TOS that is not "expected to be there" is void.
      • zeroonetwothree 27 minutes ago
        Ok but I don’t really see why this specific term would violate any law? Do we really want a society where platforms are forced to present speech that is harmful to them? If you own a store and I put a sign up on your wall advertising a rival store wouldn’t it be reasonable for you to disallow that?
      • mywittyname 20 minutes ago
        I kind of wish countries would just define, "terms of service" for everyone and not allow companies to modify them further.
      • raincole 1 hour ago
        No one says ToS are laws and especially not the parent commenter.
        • Fraterkes 21 minutes ago
          The parent comment brings up the ToS as an example of why it's naive to believe Meta is obligated to do something, but what Meta is obligated to do depends on the law.
          • raincole 6 minutes ago
            And which laws state that Meta is obligated to show ads like this?
    • nkrisc 1 hour ago
      Fair enough. If they're not impartial then lets hold them accountable for the content published in their platform.
      • wnevets 1 hour ago
        No! Massive corporations should get to have their cake and eat it too.
      • k33n 1 hour ago
        I’m not against these companies losing their Section 230 immunity. Social media platforms are, in my personal opinion, publishers in their current form.

        If they went back to operating as “friends and family feed providers” then letting them keep their 230 immunity would be easier to justify.

        • TheCoelacanth 33 minutes ago
          Yes, if they went back to being chronological feeds of people you follow, then they should get to keep Section 230 immunity.

          When they are making editorial decisions about what to content to promote to you and what content to hide from you, then they should lose it.

        • wbobeirne 49 minutes ago
          You are relying on the wrong people to be able to understand that nuanced distinction.
      • mc32 1 hour ago
        To me that’s how it should be. They shouldn’t have to run ads against themselves yet they should be liable or accountable for harm they are found guilty of.
        • pixl97 1 hour ago
          >They shouldn’t have to run ads against themselves

          This is not how it works when you're found guilty of committing harm. Tobacco companies are a good example of this.

          • mc32 1 hour ago
            If the government mandates them then yes. If it’s not mandated they have the right to refuse service.
            • pixl97 17 minutes ago
              The bigger you get the more iffy it gets refusing service to others. Also it can and will be used against you in future civil and criminal cases.
    • iinnPP 1 hour ago
      I tend to agree with you on this. I wanted to add however that Meta itself lets so many TOS violating ads in, that it seems like special treatment for ads that are much less undesirable than the ads normally pushed.

      It's not just a Meta issue either.

    • dcrazy 9 minutes ago
      This is why courts are empowered to infringe upon the rights of parties to the case.
    • hansvm 41 minutes ago
      Companies have to inform affected individuals of data breaches, especially when HIPAA gets involved. Brokers have to inform clients of transaction errors. Auto manufacturers have to inform owners of recalls. Retirement funds have to inform plan participants of lawsuits involving those funds.

      You don't even have to invoke the idea that Meta is big enough to be regulated as a public utility for this to have broad precedent in favor of forcing a malicious actor to inform its victims that they might be entitled to a small fraction of their losses in compensation.

      • zeroonetwothree 25 minutes ago
        Well we aren’t discussing the government requiring meta to inform users. We are discussing whether meta can choose which private actors’ ads to allow. It would seem silly that a platform would be forced to allow all ads.
    • pixl97 1 hour ago
      Remember when we forced the tobacco companies to run ads saying cigarettes are dangerous?

      Meta can go fuck themselves with a chainsaw if they think they can produce a harmful product without consequences.

    • mirashii 1 hour ago
      That idea was not expressed in the article, only the fact that the ads were removed. This is worth covering, especially when coupled with the context for what ads Meta regularly does allow. One does not have to believe that they're obligated to do so while also believing that it's incredibly scummy behavior that consumers should be aware of and question.

      https://www.reuters.com/investigations/meta-is-earning-fortu...

    • swiftcoder 58 minutes ago
      > The idea that Meta is obligated to be so impartial

      Is their defence of Section 230 protections not in part rooted in that claim of impartiality?

      • nradov 51 minutes ago
        No. Section 230 doesn't mention anything about impartiality.
        • swiftcoder 15 minutes ago
          It indeed doesn't, but conservative lawmakers signalled repeatedly that they were unhappy about Meta's protection under section 230 if their moderation policies were not politically neutral
    • Zigurd 1 hour ago
      There are so many ads for nostrums, cults, get rich quick scams, and other junk that violate TOS, that Meta has a legitimacy problem with their TOS.
    • freejazz 1 hour ago
      Okay? They're exactly the assholes everyone says they are. That's the point.
    • gilrain 1 hour ago
      Let’s force them to be obligated to do that, then. “Just let them hurt people, and then let them hide that hurt” kind of sucks for society.
    • 3form 1 hour ago
      Maybe, but so what? Your remark lacks a conclusion.

      Mine is that it could then well be required to do so by law. Companies are not individuals, so I don't think they are owed any freedoms beyond what is best for utility they can provide.

    • streetfighter64 1 hour ago
      The idea that a company can override laws via its TOS is a bit strange.
      • BeetleB 3 minutes ago
        Genuinely curious. By not allowing a specific type of ad, what law are they breaking?
    • Larrikin 1 hour ago
      Fuck them and their TOS. They are not a nation state and it would be nice if the government finally showed them that
    • hashmap 1 hour ago
      at certain scales, reality has to win out over whatever ideal you have in your head about how things should be. facebook is massive, a lot of society is on it, and its a problem to make recourse invisible to people most affected by the thing stealing their attention.
  • neuroelectron 49 minutes ago
    Reminds me of ChatGPT insisting all news about OpenAI is unverified speculation.
  • guywithahat 27 minutes ago
    There is a humor that these law firms won a case against Meta and the first thing they did is give them advertising money won from the court case. That said the ads sound pretty aggressive, and from what I've read it sounds like it wasn't a very fair decision. I understand the conflict of interest but I have sympathies for Meta here