Privacy Suit Filed Against Apple, Facebook, Twitter And Others
March 18, 2012 5 CommentsThirteen individuals have filed a lawsuit against more than a dozen mobile app makers–including Path, Twitter, Apple, and Facebook–who were accused of automatically uploading user address books without permission.
The suit, filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Austin, Texas, names 13 plaintiffs, most of them from Austin, and seeks class-action status. The defendants in the suit are: Path, Twitter, Apple, Facebook, Beluga, Yelp, Burbn, Instagram, Foursquare Labs, Gowalla, Foodspotting, Hipster, LinkedIn, Rovio Mobile, ZeptoLab UK, Chillingo, Electronic Arts, and Kik.
“Literally billions of contacts from the address books of tens of millions of unsuspecting wireless mobile device owners have now been accessed and stolen,” the suit says. “The surreptitious data uploads–occurring over both cellular networks and open, public wireless access nodes in homes, coffee shops, restaurants, bars, stores, and businesses all across the nation–have, quite literally, turned the address book owners’ wireless mobile devices into mobile radio beacons broadcasting and publicly exposing the unsuspecting device owner’s address book data to the world.”
The lawsuit was prompted by reports last month that Path and a bunch of other apps were snagging address books from users without their permission when the users were prompted to find friends to connect with. The companies claimed they weren’t doing anything nefarious and figured that the users would have realized that access to contact lists were needed to provide the functionality. The news prompted questions from Congress for Apple, as well as public backlash, despite the fact that Path, Apple, and others promised to fix the problem.
Representatives from Twitter, Path and Kik said they had no comment on the lawsuit. LinkedIn spokesman Hani Durzy said, “Yes, we’ve seen the suit. It’s baffling, because quite simply, our mobile apps do not do what is alleged in the suit.” ZeptoLab provided this statement: “As far as we know we have not been legally served with any lawsuit, and thus have no comment at this time.” Representatives from the other companies did not immediately respond to e-mails seeking comment today.
Privacy has become a huge topic of concern for the industry, particularly when it comes to mobile devices. Google, Apple, and other mobile platform providers have reached an agreement with the California Attorney General’s office to require app developers to post visible privacy policies. And the Obama Administration is pushing for a code of conduct and is looking toward legislation to protect consumer privacy online.
Why doesn’t Apple just build a “firewall” protecting your info and apps have to ask for permission to access your info and tell you how it will be used, similar to how when you link something to your Facebook account, it will say what it is going to access and how it will use it.
Pluzz won. For *my own* convenience, I keep *extensive* details about *all* my contacts in my Address Book. I even have entries for contacts who don’t have email addresses. But by virtue of the fact that the Address Book is so vulnerable to invasion, I now know I’m exposing the privacy of *others* (without their consent) by keeping their PII in my Address Book. I had thought of the Address Book as, just another computer tool to make my life easier. Apparently, I was wrong: it seems to be just another advertising peekaboo tool for corporate interests.
nothing is private anymore NOTHING!!!
this is creepy SERIOUSLY
aren’t they ALWAYS getting sued? how do they stay in busines