David v Goliath: Austrian Activist To Take On Facebook In Court
An Austrian law graduate
spearheading a class action suit against Facebook for alleged privacy breaches
said ahead of the first hearing Thursday he hopes the case will eventually lead
to an overhaul of a “Wild West” approach to data protection.
Max Schrems and 25,000
other Facebook users are suing the social network for various rights
violations, ranging from the “illegal” tracking of their data under EU law to
Facebook’s involvement in the PRISM surveillance programme of the US National
Security Agency (NSA).
“Basically we are asking
Facebook to stop mass surveillance, to (have) a proper privacy policy that
people can understand, but also to stop collecting data of people that are not
even Facebook users,” 27-year-old Schrems told AFP in an interview.
“There is a wide number of
issues in the lawsuit and we hope to kind of win all of them and to get a
landmark case against US data-gathering companies.”
The case has been brought
against Facebook’s European headquarters in Dublin, which registers all
accounts outside the United States and Canada — making up some 80 percent of
Facebook’s 1.35 billion users.
Schrems was able to file
his action against the Irish subsidiary at a civil court in Vienna because
under EU law, all member states have to enforce court rulings from any other
member state.
Among other issues, judges
will have to rule on Facebook’s objection that the class action is inadmissible
under Austrian law — an objection dismissed by Schrems’ lawyer as lacking “any
substance”.
So far, the social media
company has not been available for comment on the matter.
– ‘Token amount’ –
Interest in the case has
been overwhelming. Within days of launching the suit in August last year,
thousands of people — mostly based in Europe but also in Asia, Latin America
and Australia — had signed up.
In the end, Schrems
limited the number of participants to 25,000 but a further 55,000 have already
registered to join the proceedings at a later stage.
Each of the plaintiffs is
claiming a “token amount” of 500 euros ($540) in damages.
Schrems said the case is
not about getting rich, but “about the principle that fundamental rights have
to be applied”.
“We have privacy laws here
in Europe but we are not enforcing (them),” he said.
“The core issue is: do
online companies have to stick to the rules or do they live somewhere in the
Wild West where they can do whatever they want to do?”
The battle began nearly
four years ago, after Schrems had spent a semester at Santa Clara University in
Silicon Valley.
The Austrian said he was
startled by the general lackadaisical attitude towards European privacy laws.
“The general approach in
Silicone Valley is that you can do anything you want in Europe” without facing
any major consequences, Schrems said.
As a result, he set up the
Europe-v-Facebook advocacy group, which in
particular campaigns for
the overhaul of the so-called Safe Harbour agreement, a data exchange pact
signed in 2000 between the United States and the European Union.
But what if Schrems loses
the fight?
“That would also be
interesting”, mused the activist, because it would beg the question “why you
can’t win if there are privacy laws” and they have been broken
http://www.ngrguardiannews.com/2015/04/david-v-goliath-austrian-activist-to-take-on-facebook-in-court
David v Goliath: Austrian Activist To Take On Facebook In Court
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