Technology Today

Facebook has filed a federal lawsuit in California against the New Jersey-based data analytics firm OneAudience claiming it allegedly harvested data from the social network.The social networking giant claims that the firm paid app developers to install its Software Development Kit (SDK) in their apps which was used to collect data on Facebook users without their knowledge.According to court documents obtained by ZDNet, the SDK was embedded in a wide variety of apps and some were even made available through the official Google Play Store.
In its complaint, Facebook provided more details on the kind of information OneAudience allegedly harvested, saying:"After a user installed one of these apps on their device, the malicious SDK enabled OneAudience to collect information about the user from their device and their Facebook, Google, or Twitter accounts, in instances where the user logged into the app using those accounts.
With respect to Facebook, OneAudience used the malicious SDK without authorization from Facebook to access and obtain a user's name, email address, locale (i.e.
the country that the user logged in from), time zone, Facebook ID, and, in limited instances, gender."Twitter was the first to discover that OneAudience was secretly harvesting data in November of last year and in a blog post, the social network confirmed that the company was also targeting Facebook, Apple and Google users.Facebook's lawsuit against the company comes after its investigation into the matter has been closed.
The company also revealed to ZDNet that it first learned about the suspicious behavior of the OneAudience SDK from a bug report submitted to its Data Abuse Bounty program which it created after the Cambridge Analytica scandal.In response to the accusations that its SDK was harvesting user data, OneAudience published a statement on its website claiming that the company never intended to collect any user data at all, which reads:Recently, we were advised that personal information from hundreds of mobile IDs may have been passed to our oneAudience platform.
This data was never intended to be collected, never added to our database and never used.
We proactively updated our SDK to make sure that this information could not be collected on November 13, 2019.
We then pushed the new version of the SDK to our developer partners and required that they update to this new version.
We believe that consumers should have the opportunity to choose who they share their data with and in what context.
Today, we are shutting down the OneAudience SDK.Facebook responded to OneAudience's behavior by sending the company a cease and desist letter and it also requested that the firm participate in an audit.
However, OneAudience refused to cooperate according to Facebook and now the social network is asking a judge to order the data analytics firm to comply with its audit request.We've also highlighted the best VPN servicesVia ZDNet





Unlimited Portal Access + Monthly Magazine - 12 issues


Contribute US to Start Broadcasting - It's Voluntary!


ADVERTISE


Merchandise (Peace Series)

 


Google is fixing a major issue with your Gmail inbox, and free upgrade is coming soon


Top Tech: 5 Amazon-rivalling deals from Apple, Samsung, Shark and more


Amazon Prime Day: Favourite tech gizmos and home appliances we actually use and love


Consumers can get an Echo Pop speaker for less than ₤ 6 if they do one easy thing


Sky is dispensing a huge upgrade, however just if your postcode is on this list


Amazon slashes ₤ 450 off Shark self-emptying robotic vacuum in mega Prime Day offer


Newest Kindle hits lowest ever cost in Amazon Prime Day deal with over ₤ 100 off


Samsung unveils new Galaxy, and it makes your current Android phone appearance extremely inferior


Simply hours remain on Virgin Media's complimentary 4K TV deal - act quickly


Everyone with an Android phone placed on red alert as massive new threat validated


The 'finest' smart device of 2025 confirmed - has the iPhone or Android come out on top?


Amazon's best Apple deals for Prime Day consisting of iPhone, iPad and AirPods


Tech professional warns 'never state yes' to 3 questions from callers you don't recognise


Millions of Brits 'forced to function as online security guards' for elderly family members


Leading Tech: Virgin Media's totally free television giveaway ends quickly as 48-hour countdown begins


All Amazon Prime users put on high alert - you need to follow 4 new rules today


Amazon gives you 3 reasons to ditch your Fire TV Stick and try something new this week


Apple fans rush for 22% off AirPods Pro 2 as Amazon Prime Day kicks off


Paramount+ drops to £3.99 in half price sale ending this week


Amazon is handing out free Echo speakers this week and here's how to get yours


AI is the 'best organization partner' says youngest self-made female billionaire


Everyone using Amazon issued with an urgent 'don't click' warning this week


Sky is dishing out free TV channel upgrades, and here's how to watch it


Apple fans rushing for ₤ 35 iPhone 16 Pro Max as Sky uses payday deal


'I visited Chinese city which is like sci-fi movie with robots and noiseless trains'


Top Tech: Amazon's best early Prime Day deals including Ring, Tefal and Nespresso


Brits now 'obsessed' with health tracking and say it's key to motivation


Virgin Media is distributing complimentary wise TVs in surprise seven-day sale


O2 confirms UK network switch off and the exact date your phone might quit working


Samsung and Google have a new Android competitor that's like Nothing you've seen before


'Spectacular' Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra gets £10 a month price cut


Sky users given 48-hour cost alert and your costs could increase tomorrow


Never ever miss your favourite television series when on vacation with basic travel hack


Amazon may offer big reason to ditch your Fire TV Stick next week and try something new


Samsung and Google smartphone deals consist of free earbuds and smartwatches