Australia watchdog sues Facebook over 'misleading' VPN app
Australia's consumer watchdog launched legal action
against Facebook on Wednesday, alleging the social media giant
"misled" thousands of Australians by collecting user data from a free
VPN service advertised as private.
The platform could face a fine if found guilty of
deceiving users, as Australia takes an increasingly assertive stance towards
powerful US tech titans.
The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission
(ACCC) has accused Facebook and two of its subsidiaries -- Facebook Israel and
Onavo Inc -- of misleading people who downloaded its virtual private network
(VPN) app Onavo Protect, by collecting and using their "very detailed and
valuable personal activity data".
Records of which apps they accessed and the amount
of time they spent using them were among the data allegedly used to support
Facebook's market research.
The ACCC alleges Facebook and its two partners
falsely represented the now-defunct VPN service as keeping user data
"private, protected and secret" between February 2016 and October
2017.
"Consumers often use VPN services because they
care about their online privacy, and that is what this Facebook product claimed
to offer. In fact, Onavo Protect channelled significant volumes of their
personal activity data straight back to Facebook," ACCC Chair Rod Sims
said.
"We believe that the conduct deprived
Australian consumers of the opportunity to make an informed choice about the
collection and use of their personal activity data by Facebook and Onavo."
A Facebook spokesperson said the firm had cooperated
with the ACCC's investigation and would review the court filing.
"When people downloaded Onavo Protect, we were
always clear about the information we collect and how it is used," they
said.
"We will... continue to defend our position in
response to this recent filing."
The ACCC has previously helped draft a law that
threatens Facebook and Google with millions of dollars in fines unless they
agree to pay media outlets when their platforms host news content.
In March, the Office of the Australian Information
Commissioner also began legal action against Facebook for allegedly exposing
more than 300,000 Australians to a data breach by political consulting firm
Cambridge Analytica.
Facebook has already paid penalties in the United
States and Britain over the massive 2018 data hijacking scandal involving the
now-defunct British company.



