Appeals Court: FTC Able To Reopen Meta Privacy Case

Image copyright: Chesnot/Contributor/Getty Images News via Getty Images

The Facts

  • A US appeals court ruled late Tuesday that the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) cannot be prevented from reopening its investigation into Facebook’s privacy unit, dealing a blow to parent company Meta's efforts to freeze the case.

  • The DC Circuit Court of Appeals decision allows the FTC to push for increased measures to tighten a 2020 privacy settlement with Meta, which argued that it had already paid a $5B fine and implemented safeguards as part of the deal.


The Spin

Narrative A

Meta is fighting tooth and nail to prevent the FTC from imposing common sense regulations to protect children's personal data. The Facebook parent has been under regulatory heat for more than a decade, and it consistently circumvents outdated agreements to grow its profits. The 2020 settlement with the FTC was never intended to be a final agreement, and the FTC has every right to tighten restrictions over time.

Narrative B

After Meta paid a $5B fine and adhered to the FTC's terms, the regulator is attempting to completely rewrite its settlement with Meta and unconstitutionally impose ridiculous restrictions that would violate the previous agreement. The FTC doesn't have the authority to renege on the terms of its settlement. Meta will continue to fight for fairness and the rights of companies to not have their settlements arbitrarily changed at the hands of bureaucratic agencies.


Metaculus Prediction


Articles on this story