Parenting Positive Kids
I got the following email:
| NOTICE OF PENDING CLASS ACTION AND NOTICE OF PROPOSED SETTLEMENT | ||||||||||||||||||
| ANGEL FRALEY V. FACEBOOK, INC. | ||||||||||||||||||
| You are receiving this e-mail because you may have been featured in a "Sponsored Story" on Facebook prior to December 3, 2012. | ||||||||||||||||||
| A federal court authorized this Notice. This is not a solicitation from a lawyer. | ||||||||||||||||||
| Why did I get this notice? This Notice relates to a proposed settlement ("Settlement") of a class action lawsuit ("Action") filed against Facebook relating to a particular Facebook feature called "Sponsored Stories." According to available records, you may be a "Class Member." | ||||||||||||||||||
| What is the Action about? The Action claims that Facebook unlawfully used the names, profile pictures, photographs, likenesses, and identities of Facebook users in the United States to advertise or sell products and services through Sponsored Stories without obtaining those users' consent. Facebook denies any wrongdoing and any liability whatsoever. No court or other entity has made any judgment or other determination of any liability. | ||||||||||||||||||
| What is a Sponsored Story? Sponsored Stories are a form of advertising that typically contains posts which appeared on facebook.com about or from a Facebook user or entity that a business, organization, or individual has paid to promote so there is a better chance that the posts will be seen by the user or entity's chosen audience. Sponsored Stories may be displayed, for example, when a Facebook user interacts with the Facebook service (including sub-domains, international versions, widgets, plug-ins, platform applications or games, and mobile applications) in certain ways, such as by clicking on the Facebook "Like" button on a business's, organization's, or individual's Facebook page. Sponsored Stories typically include a display of a Facebook user's Facebook name (i.e., the name the user has associated with his or her Facebook account) and/or profile picture (if the user has uploaded one) with a statement describing the user's interaction with the Facebook service, such as "John Smith likes UNICEF," "John Smith played Farmville," or "John Smith shared a link." | ||||||||||||||||||
| What relief does the Settlement provide? Facebook will pay $20 million into a fund that can be used, in part, to pay claims of Class Members (including Minor Class Members) who appeared in a Sponsored Story. Each participating Class Member who submits a valid and timely claim form may be eligible to receive up to $10. The amount, if any, paid to each claimant depends upon the number of claims made and other factors detailed in the Settlement. No one knows in advance how much each claimant will receive, or whether any money will be paid directly to claimants. If the number of claims made renders it economically infeasible to pay money to persons who make a timely and valid claim, payment will be made to the not-for-profit organizations identified on the Settlement website at www.fraleyfacebooksettlement. | ||||||||||||||||||
| In addition to monetary relief, Facebook will (a) revise its terms of service (known as the "Statement of Rights and Responsibilities" or "SRR") to more fully explain the instances in which users agree to the display of their names and profile pictures in connection with Sponsored Stories; (b) create an easily accessible mechanism that enables users to view, on a going-forward basis, the subset of their interactions and other content on Facebook that have been displayed in Sponsored Stories (if any); (c) develop settings that will allow users to prevent particular items or categories of content or information related to them from being displayed in future Sponsored Stories; (d) revise its SRR to confirm that minors represent that their parent or legal guardian consents to the use of the minor's name and profile picture in connection with commercial, sponsored, or related content; (e) provide parents and legal guardians with additional information about how advertising works on Facebook in its Family Safety Center and provide parents and legal guardians with additional tools to control whether their children's names and profile pictures are displayed in connection with Sponsored Stories; and (f) add a control in minor users' profiles that enables each minor user to indicate that his or her parents are not Facebook users and, where a minor user indicates that his or her parents are not on Facebook, Facebook will make the minor ineligible to appear in Sponsored Stories until he or she reaches the age of 18, until the minor changes his or her setting to indicate that his or her parents are on Facebook, or until a confirmed parental relationship with the minor user is established. | ||||||||||||||||||
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| Your Class Member Number: 122158904 | ||||||||||||||||||
| To Parents and Guardians of Children on Facebook: The Settlement also involves the claims of minors featured in Sponsored Stories on Facebook. Please see the Settlement website for more information. | ||||||||||||||||||
| More information? For more information about the Settlement and how to take the actions described above, please visit www.fraleyfacebooksettlement. | ||||||||||||||||||
Replies
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what I understand from the above is that it is when people "like" a business/advertisement as well as games and apps...like up in the right corner when it has such and such a person likes walmart, etc etc...so it is letting people know they can possibly get a settlement since there was no prior authorizations especially to minors...as far as photos on fb...whoever wrote about anything being on fb forever, that is defintely true (as well as anything at all anyone posts or has anywhere online) it is certainly ok to have pictures...just teach your kids about what they even have as pictures, as well as our own selves, dont put anything up that you dont want everyone to see...best not to take pics like that in the first place but if people must, then they need to realize even taken on a phone it can still be shown anywhere...ones its taken its att, verizon, virgin mobile, etc etc...regardless of any privacy settings anyone has! People need to be discreet regarding pictures...and as far as "likes" it is totally a marketing tool for businesses and advertising...they can pinpoint exactly what you like and want and hence they know how to market to you precisely...which is a fabulous concept and it totally works!!