The Supreme Court will hear Facebook’s bid to stop a class-action
The Supreme Court has agreed to consider a bid from to challenge a class-action lawsuit against the company over s handling of automatic text messages.was sued by a man who received text message notifications from the platform despite never having a account, violating an anti-robocall law. argues that they were sent by mistake.claimed it didn t violate the anti-robocall law, the Telephone Consumer Protection Act of , and has asked the Supreme Court to review a federal appeals court decision.If the Supreme Court upholds the lower court s interpretation, it could cost billions of dollars.
The Supreme Court has decided to review a class-action lawsuit against over automated text message notifications sent by the social media platform, first reported.
faces a class action lawsuit filed by a man who says he received automated text messages from , despite never having a account, and accuses the social media giant of violating a federal law against robocalls.
has said the messages were sent by mistake because the man s cell phone number was recycled and previously belonged to another user.
As part of its defense, argues that a federal appeals court that allowed the lawsuit to go forward misinterpreted the law against robocalls and petitioned the Supreme Court to review that court s decision.
Billions of dollars are at stake in putative class actions seeking $,-per-call statutory penalties. The lower courts are hopelessly fractured, and certiorari is warranted, said in its petition to the Supreme Court.
The law in question is the Telephone Consumer Protection Act, a measure that made it illegal for companies to use an autodialer to contact people without permission and imposes a $, fine per violation.
The US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit allowed the class action suit against to proceed based on an interpretation of autodialer to include services like s text message alerts, which are automatically sent in response to triggers like a suspicious login to someone s account. argues that autodialers should be defined more narrowly as systems that randomly call or text any phone number.