California jury rules Meta violated privacy law in case involving period-tracking app

California jury rules Meta violated privacy law in case involving period-tracking app


Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg departs E. Barrett Prettyman United States Court House on April 14, 2025 in Washington, DC. 

Andrew Harnik | Getty Images

A California jury ruled against Meta in a privacy-related lawsuit involving the alleged collection of sensitive data from Flo, a period-tracking app.

The jury ruled that the plaintiffs proved that Meta violated the California Invasion of Privacy Act, according to a verdict form filed Friday in the U.S. District Court for Northern District of California.

The ruling stems from a class-action lawsuit dating back to 2021 against the health-tech company Flo Health and other businesses like Meta, Google-parent Alphabet and smaller data analytics firms.

Flo Health told users that “their sensitive reproductive health information” and survey questions would not be disclosed, but that personal data ended up being shared with companies like Meta and Google via their respective online ad-related tools known as software-development kits, according to a separate court filing.

Google and one of the analytics firms agreed to settle their claims prior to a jury trial that began in July, while Flo Health settled the day before the trial’s conclusion on Aug 1. Meta chose to take the case to court and lost. The social media company is expected to appeal the verdict.

“This verdict sends a clear message about the protection of digital health data and the responsibilities of Big Tech,” said lead trial lawyers Michael Canty and Carol Villegas of Labaton Keller Sucharow in a shared statement. “Companies like Meta that covertly profit from users’ most intimate information must be held accountable.”

A Meta spokesperson said the company disagreed with the ruling.

“The plaintiffs’ claims against Meta are simply false,” the Meta spokesperson said in a statement. “User privacy is important to Meta, which is why we do not want health or other sensitive information and why our terms prohibit developers from sending any.”

WATCH: Jim Cramer on the big tech earnings.

I wanted the markets to be defined by huge earnings reports from Microsoft and Meta, says Jim Cramer



Source

Dell stock pops as company ups long-term revenue growth expectations
Technology

Dell stock pops as company ups long-term revenue growth expectations

Visitors watch a hologram at the stand of Dell Technologies Inc., at the MWC (Mobile World Congress), the world’s biggest mobile fair, in Barcelona on March 5, 2025. Josep Lago | AFP | Getty Images Shares of Dell Technologies climbed 6% in premarket trading Tuesday after the company increased its long-term revenue and profit growth […]

Read More
Brad Gerstner on OpenAI’s dealmaking with AMD, Nvidia: ‘The best chips will win’
Technology

Brad Gerstner on OpenAI’s dealmaking with AMD, Nvidia: ‘The best chips will win’

Brad Gerstner, Altimeter Founder and CEO, speaks at the Delivering Alpha conference in New York City on Sept. 28, 2023. Adam Jeffery | CNBC Investor Brad Gerstner cautioned Monday that OpenAI’s deals with Nvidia and AMD are purely announcements, not deployments. “Now we will see what gets delivered,” the Altimeter Capital founder told CNBC. “Ultimately, […]

Read More
AppLovin stock tanks on report SEC is investigating company over data-collection practices
Technology

AppLovin stock tanks on report SEC is investigating company over data-collection practices

The AppLovin logo arranged on a smartphone in New York, US, on Wednesday, Feb. 26, 2025. Gabby Jones | Bloomberg | Getty Images AppLovin shares plummeted on Monday after Bloomberg reported that the SEC has been probing the mobile advertising company over its data-collection practices. The agency has been looking into whether the company violated […]

Read More