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Meta (Again) Denies Netflix Read Facebook Users' Private Messenger Messages

Saturday April 6, 2024. 04:34 PM , from Slashdot
Meta (Again) Denies Netflix Read Facebook Users' Private Messenger Messages
TechCrunch reports this week that Meta 'is denying that it gave Netflix access to users' private messages...'

The claim references a court filing that emerged as part of the discovery process in a class-action lawsuit over data privacy practices between a group of consumers and Facebook's parent, Meta. The document alleges that Netflix and Facebook had a 'special relationship' and that Facebook even cut spending on original programming for its Facebook Watch video service so as not to compete with Netflix, a large Facebook advertiser. It also says that Netflix had access to Meta's 'Inbox API' that offered the streamer 'programmatic access to Facebook's user's private message inboxes....'

Meta's communications director, Andy Stone, reposted the original X post on Tuesday with a statement disputing that Netflix had been given access to users' private messages. 'Shockingly untrue,' Stone wrote on X. 'Meta didn't share people's private messages with Netflix. The agreement allowed people to message their friends on Facebook about what they were watching on Netflix, directly from the Netflix app. Such agreements are commonplace in the industry....'
Beyond Stone's X post, Meta has not provided further comment. However, The New York Times had previously reported in 2018 that Netflix and Spotify could read users' private messages, according to documents it had obtained. Meta denied those claims at the time via a blog post titled 'Facts About Facebook's Messaging Partnerships,' where it explained that Netflix and Spotify had access to APIs that allowed consumers to message friends about what they were listening to on Spotify or watching on Netflix directly from those companies' respective apps. This required the companies to have 'write access' to compose messages to friends, 'read access' to allow users to read messages back from friends, and 'delete access,' which meant if you deleted a message from the third-party app, it would also delete the message from Facebook.

'No third party was reading your private messages, or writing messages to your friends without your permission. Many news stories imply we were shipping over private messages to partners, which is not correct,' the blog post stated. In any event, Messenger didn't implement default end-to-end encryption until December 2023, a practice that would have made these sorts of claims a non-starter, as it wouldn't have left room for doubt.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.
https://tech.slashdot.org/story/24/04/06/0154236/meta-again-denies-netflix-read-facebook-users-priva...

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