News Technology Mark Zuckerberg to give deposition in Texas lawsuit over facial recognition

Mark Zuckerberg to give deposition in Texas lawsuit over facial recognition

In 2020, Meta settled a USD 650 million class action lawsuit in Illinois over similar violations to the state’s biometric privacy law. In late 2021, the tech giant ceased its use of the technology.

Mark Zuckerberg, Texas lawsuit Image Source : FILEMark Zuckerberg to give deposition in Texas lawsuit over facial recognition

A US judge has ruled that Mark Zuckerberg, founder and CEO of Meta must participate in a deposition as part of an ongoing lawsuit in Texas concerning the company's face recognition technology. According to a ruling made by Justice Jeff Rambin, the state court has rejected Meta's recent appeal "seeking relief from an order compelling the oral deposition" of Zuckerberg at an undisclosed date, reports CNBC.

In February 2022, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed the suit, saying that Meta has been "capturing and using the biometric data of millions of Texans without properly obtaining their informed consent to do so".

He also held that Meta violated the state’s Deceptive Trade Practices Act by "failing to disclose information -- including the fact that it collects biometric identifiers -- with the intent to induce Facebook users in Texas into using Facebook, which such users would not have done had the information been disclosed".

According to the latest ruling, the state of Texas has claimed that Zuckerberg possesses "unique personal knowledge of discoverable information" that is pertinent to its lawsuit. The lawsuit alleges that Meta has violated state laws regarding the collection of biometric data and engaged in deceptive trade practices, the report noted.

In 2020, Meta settled a USD 650 million class action lawsuit in Illinois over similar violations to the state’s biometric privacy law. In late 2021, the tech giant ceased its use of the technology.

Meanwhile, privacy rights advocacy group noyb has filed a new complaint against Meta, alleging that the social media platform unlawfully ignores the users’ right to easily withdraw consent and asks them to pay. Since the beginning of November, Facebook and Instagram users who don’t want to be tracked have to pay a "privacy fee" of up to 251.88 euros per year.

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Inputs from IANS