Meta Used Spyware to Access Its Users’ Activities on Rival Platforms
New documents from a class action against Meta “reveal some of the specific ways it tackled rivals in recent years,” reports the Observer.
“One of them was using software made by a mobile data analytics company called Onavo in 2016 to access user activities on Snapchat, and eventually Amazon and YouTube, too.”
Facebook acquired Onavo in 2013 and shut it down in 2019 after a TechCrunch report revealed that the company was paying teenagers to use the software to collect user data.
In 2020, two Facebook users filed a class action lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California against Meta, then called Facebook, alleging the company engaged in anticompetitive practices and exploited user data. In 2023, the plaintiffs’ attorney Brian J. Dunne submitted documents listing how Facebook used Onavo’s software to spy on competitors, including Snapchat. According to the documents, made public this week, the Onavo team pitched and launched a project codenamed “Ghostbusters” — in reference to the Snapchat logo — where they developed “kits that can be installed on iOS or Android that intercept traffic for specific sub-domains,” allowing them “to read what would otherwise be encrypted traffic so we can measure in-app usage.”
The documents also included a presentation from the Onavo team to Mark Zuckerberg showing that they had the ability to track “detailed in-app activity” by “parsing Snapchat analytics collected from incentivized participants in Onavo’s program….” The technology was used to do the same to YouTube from 2017 to 2018 and Amazon in 2018, according to the documents. “The intended and actual result of this program was to harm competition, including Facebook’s then-nascent Social Advertising competitor Snapchat,” the document alleged.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
New documents from a class action against Meta “reveal some of the specific ways it tackled rivals in recent years,” reports the Observer.
“One of them was using software made by a mobile data analytics company called Onavo in 2016 to access user activities on Snapchat, and eventually Amazon and YouTube, too.”
Facebook acquired Onavo in 2013 and shut it down in 2019 after a TechCrunch report revealed that the company was paying teenagers to use the software to collect user data.
In 2020, two Facebook users filed a class action lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California against Meta, then called Facebook, alleging the company engaged in anticompetitive practices and exploited user data. In 2023, the plaintiffs’ attorney Brian J. Dunne submitted documents listing how Facebook used Onavo’s software to spy on competitors, including Snapchat. According to the documents, made public this week, the Onavo team pitched and launched a project codenamed “Ghostbusters” — in reference to the Snapchat logo — where they developed “kits that can be installed on iOS or Android that intercept traffic for specific sub-domains,” allowing them “to read what would otherwise be encrypted traffic so we can measure in-app usage.”
The documents also included a presentation from the Onavo team to Mark Zuckerberg showing that they had the ability to track “detailed in-app activity” by “parsing Snapchat analytics collected from incentivized participants in Onavo’s program….” The technology was used to do the same to YouTube from 2017 to 2018 and Amazon in 2018, according to the documents. “The intended and actual result of this program was to harm competition, including Facebook’s then-nascent Social Advertising competitor Snapchat,” the document alleged.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.