Leaked documents from a lawsuit filed by a now-defunct startup
Six4Three on Facebook shows some 700 pages revealing how Facebook
leveraged user data against rivals and offered it up as a sop to
friends.
NBC News reported how Facebook's executive team harnessed user data
and used it as a bargaining chip to manipulate rivals. There are
thousands of leaked documents to support that this was done under
the supervision of the company's CEO Mark Zuckerberg.
NBC News has published an entire log of documents containing 7,000
pages including 4,000 internal communications such as emails, web
chats, notes, presentations, spreadsheets on Facebook. These
documents are dated between 2011 and 2015 that disclose the
company's strategy of rewarding partners by giving them
preferential data while denying the same to competitors.
The lawsuit that resulted in this major leak, was filed by
Six4Three, a now inoperative startup which created the failed app
Pikinis. The app allowed users to view pictures posted by people on
Facebook and in order to work, the software required access to data
on Facebook. The suit accuses Facebook of misusing and abusing data
and uneven distribution of it. Other apps including Lulu, Beehive
ID, and Rosa Bandet couldn't do business anymore after losing
access to data.
The documents also revealed similar operations, for instance, the
social network company gave extended access to user data to Amazon,
as it partnered with Facebook and spent on Facebook advertising
while denied data to MessageMe, a messaging app when it grew large
enough to be a competition to Facebook.
Commenting on the documents, Facebook’s vice president and deputy
general counsel, Paul Grewal, told NBC News, “As we’ve said many
times, Six4Three — creators of the Bikinis app — cherry-picked
these documents from years ago as part of a lawsuit to force
Facebook to share information on friends of the app’s users.”
However, no evidence has been provided by the company to support
the "cherry-picked" claim.
In March, this year Zuckerberg said, that
Facebook would focus
more on its user's privacy as the social network's future. But
for Facebook, privacy seems like a PR stunt and data more of a
currency.