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Meta has to pay $90 million for tracking users even after they logged off

Given its track record, Facebook apparently loves to pay out settlements.

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Image: KnowTechie

Meta has agreed to pay out an enormous lawsuit settlement. This time it’s to the tune of $90 million. The lawsuit, filed roughly ten years ago, claimed the company tracked users’ internet activity even after they logged off of the platform.

Digging deeper, Facebook allegedly violated privacy and wiretapping laws between April 2010 and September 2011 by storing cookies on third-party websites that contained “like” buttons.

Users gave permission for the social media site to track them while logged in, but it promised to stop after they logged out.

READ MORE: Meta spirals from the top-10 list of most valuable companies

Naturally, with this lawsuit dragging out over a decade, the company wants to put all this mess behind them.

“Reaching a settlement in this case, which is more than a decade old, is in the best interest of our community and our shareholders and we’re glad to move past this issue,” wrote a company spokesperson in a statement to Variety.

Meta is no stranger to lawsuits. Just last year, the company agreed to pay $650 million in a lawsuit settlement linked to photo tagging. And just this week, the state of Texas announced that it was also suing the company over its facial recognition program.

In any event, the court will need to approve the proposed settlement Meta has agreed to. If the court approves the settlement, this would be one of the bigger data-privacy class-action settlements in history.

If the $90 million settlement is approved, it will be distributed evenly across affected users.

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