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Mass Data Scraping Lawsuit Filed by Meta

 


As part of a lawsuit filed against the digital surveillance firm Voyager Labs, Meta claims that the company created 38,000 fake, unauthorized accounts to collect 600,000 Facebook users' personal information. 

A federal lawsuit filed by Microsoft has asked a California court for Voyager to be banned from Facebook and Instagram, claiming that the company scraped the “viewable profile information” of Facebook and Instagram users. They claim the company scraped posts, likes, friend lists, photos, and comments from Facebook and Instagram users. It has been reported that Facebook groups and pages were allegedly tapped for data. 

After the company approached companies interested in monitoring social media without being detected, Voyager sold the company's tool to the highest bidder, according to Gizmodo. 

In addition, Twitter, YouTube, LinkedIn, and Telegram accounts were created to scrape data. So far, Meta, the company that owns Facebook, is the only social media firm that has taken legal action against Voyager. 

The company wrote in a blog post about the legal filing. It said that Voyager had violated Facebook's terms of service regarding fake accounts and automated scraping and automating of user accounts. To hide its activity, Voyager used a network of computers and networks spread across many different countries to scrape user data, Meta further explained. 

A free trial of Voyager's software was used by the Los Angeles Police Department in 2019, according to The Guardian in 2021. 

Following a pitch from the company, they purchased it as a surveillance tool to monitor thousands of online friends of potential suspects.  

It has been reported in the Guardian that LAPD was told that through this tool, officers would be able to "predict" crimes before they occur and communicate with potential victims.  

PCMag's request for comment from Voyager was not immediately answered. The Supreme Court allowed Meta earlier this week to pursue a lawsuit against Israeli spyware company NSO Group, which had gained access to WhatsApp servers "unlawfully" when installing spyware on users' devices through their WhatsApp accounts. 

Last month, Meta accepted a one-year settlement from a class-action lawsuit in which the plaintiffs accused Meta of sharing personal data about their users without their consent, a move that did not end well for Meta. The lawsuit alleges the company shared users' data without their consent with third parties.  

A lawsuit filed by Facebook in 2018 was filed after it was revealed that the company had shared up to 87 million Facebook users' Personal Information with a British consulting firm, Cambridge Analytica.

Crypto Trading App Voyager Hit By Cyberattack, Company Shuts Down Website

 

Cryptocurrency brokerage platform Voyager stopped its operations on 28th December after it suffered a  cyberattack that disrupted its DNS configuration. Voyager Digital LLC is a cryptocurrency is a brokerage platform where an investor can trade their assets with the help of the Voyager mobile app. The company has shown rapid growth in the year 2020, increasing its growth by 40x times in the last 12 months. Not only this, Voyager currently holds under management $200 million in assets. On 28th December, Voyager's online platform had to shut down due to, as per the press release "currently undergoing maintenance." 

The company later revealed that it had suffered a cyberattack which led to the closing and canceling of all limit orders. Steve Ehrlich, Co-founder, and CEO of Voyager said in a press release that "customer funds and security are of the utmost importance to Voyager. Whilst all funds and crypto are secure we have had to temporarily halt trading on the platform and we sincerely apologize for the inconvenience and thank our clients for their patience." 

The team at voyager had no trouble finding the intrusion, the moment it was detected, the team shut down the systems to save client information and assets.  After the cyberattack, the Voyager app is now online, and all the tradings on the website are now back to normal. To assure cybersecurity, Voyager signed out all its users from the app and has advised them to change their login credentials and reset 2-step verification (2fa). As of now, there is not much detail about how the cyberattack happened other than a tweet that mentioned that it was a DNS attack. 

"With a highly experienced team that has previously built successful online brokerages, we know the importance of having robust and highly secure systems to counter cyber attacks. With our rapid growth to date bringing the business into the spotlight, we are fully prepared for such events and in this case, have acted swiftly to prevent any impact on the business," says Voyager press release.