National Post

Calgarians’ class-action suit targets Facebook

- Jim Bronskill

OT TAWA • Two Facebook users are seeking damages on behalf of hundreds of thousands of Canadians whose personal data may have been improperly used for political purposes.

The proposed class-action lawsuit filed by Calgary residents Saul Benary and Karma Holoboff asks the Federal Court to order the social-media giant to bolster its security practices to better protect sensitive informatio­n and comply with federal privacy law.

It also seeks $ 1,000 for each of the approximat­ely 622,000 Canadians whose informatio­n was shared with others through a digital app.

In April last year, privacy commission­er Daniel Therrien and his British Columbia counterpar­t, Michael MCEvoy, uncovered major shortcomin­gs in Facebook’s procedures and called for stronger laws to protect Canadians.

The probe followed reports that Facebook let an outside organizati­on use an app to access users’ personal informatio­n, and that some of the data was then passed to others. Recipients of the informatio­n included the firm Cambridge Analytica, which was involved in U. S. political campaigns.

The app, at one point known as This is Your Digital Life, encouraged users to complete a personalit­y quiz but collected more informatio­n about the people who installed the app as well as data about their Facebook friends, the commission­ers said.

About 300,000 Facebook users worldwide added the app, leading to the potential disclosure of the personal informatio­n of approximat­ely 87 million others, including some 622,000 Canadians, the report said.

The commission­ers concluded that Facebook broke Canada’s privacy law governing companies by failing to obtain valid and meaningful consent of app users and their friends, and that it had “inadequate safeguards” to protect user informatio­n.

Despite its public acknowledg­ment of a “major breach of trust” in the Cambridge Analytica scandal, Facebook disputed the report’s findings and the commission­ers said the firm refused to implement their recommenda­tions.

As a result, Therrien launched his own Federal Court action in February, asking a judge to declare that Facebook violated Canadian privacy law. In turn, Facebook asked a judge to toss out the watchdog’s finding. Facebook has said there is no evidence that Canadian user data was shared with Cambridge Analytica, a point the company reiterated Wednesday in a statement to The Canadian Press.

In their applicatio­n to the court, however, Benary and Holoboff say they were informed by Facebook in April 2018 that their informatio­n “had been disclosed to Cambridge Analytica without their consent.”

Meg Sinclair, a spokeswoma­n for Facebook Canada, said Wednesday the company had made “dramatic improvemen­ts to our platform to protect people’s personal informatio­n.”

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