Court documents say Facebook allowed Netflix to view users' private messages to tailor content
According to a lawsuit, Facebook's parent company Meta allegedly allowed Netflix to access its users' private messages in the "last decade" to help the streaming giant better customize content for its own users. The court documents, unsealed on March 23, are part of a major antitrust lawsuit filed against Meta last April. The class-action lawsuit was filed by two US citizens, Maximilian Klein and Sarah Grabert, who accused Netflix and Facebook of having a "special relationship" and allowing the streaming website to "customize access" to user data.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Donald Trump’s Cryptocurrency Project Offers a Hot Deal to All Other Altcoins
Cardano (ADA) Founder Hoskinson Signals Collaboration with Ripple (XRP) and a Surprise Altcoin
Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson signaled cooperation with two different altcoins in his statement. Here are the details.
The Daily: What's next for crypto after the Trump tariff tantrum, South Korea's 'kimchi premium' soars to 10-month high and more
Crypto markets crashed after President Trump’s weekend tariff announcements, with bitcoin dropping over 10%, ether plunging 36% and leading memecoins falling more than 40% amid broad risk-off sentiment.South Korea’s bitcoin “kimchi premium” surged to a 10-month high of 9.7% on Monday as local prices remained steady amid a broader global crypto sell-off, according to data from CryptoQuant.
ApeChain’s Spotlight Loyalty Program: How Can You Earn Rewards?