An Austrian waging a battle against Facebook's privacy policies said today that 25,000 users of the social networking giant have signed on to his class action lawsuit.
The suit, filed by lawyer Max Schrems, claims a symbolic USD 660 per plaintiff from Facebook for several out of a "long list" of alleged violations of the law, his advocacy group Europe-v-Facebook said.
These include its privacy policy, Facebook's alleged participation in the US National Security Agency's PRISM snooping programme, and tracking users' visits to other websites with for example the "Like" function.
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"With this number of participants we have a really excellent basis not just to complain about Facebook in Europe but actually to do something," Schrems said in a statement on his website www.Europe-v-facebook.Org.
The suit is directed against Facebook's Ireland-based subsidiary, the US firm's headquarters for its overseas operations, and was not open to users from the United States and Canada. The subsidiary has to abide by EU data protection laws, which are more stringent than those in North America.
The majority of those who signed up were from Europe, with the biggest numbers from Germany, Austria and the Netherlands.
Facebook had 829 million active users worldwide on average in June, according to its website.