Snap agrees to pay $35m over illegal user data collection in US

FILE - The lawsuit alleged that Snapchat's filters and lenses violated the state's Biometric Information Privacy Act, adding that the company stored “biometric data without users' consent”. In this March 2, 2017, file photo, a banner for Snap Inc. hangs from the front of the New York Stock Exchange. FILE PHOTO: AP Photo/Mark Lennihan

FILE - The lawsuit alleged that Snapchat's filters and lenses violated the state's Biometric Information Privacy Act, adding that the company stored “biometric data without users' consent”. In this March 2, 2017, file photo, a banner for Snap Inc. hangs from the front of the New York Stock Exchange. FILE PHOTO: AP Photo/Mark Lennihan

Published Aug 24, 2022

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San Francisco: Snap, the parent company of photo-sharing platform Snapchat, has reached a $35 million (about R600m) settlement with the state of Illinois in the US, in a class-action lawsuit over illegal user data collection.

The lawsuit alleged that Snapchat's filters and lenses violated the state's Biometric Information Privacy Act (Bipa).

The company stored "biometric data without users' consent," reports Chicago Tribune.

People who used lenses and filters between November 17, 2015 and today are eligible for a cut of the settlement, "estimated to be between $58 and $117," the report said late on Tuesday.

The state law requires companies to tell people in writing why their biometric data is being collected and how long it will be kept.

A company spokesperson, however, said Snapchat lenses "do not collect biometric data that can be used to identify a specific person, or engage in facial identification".

"While we are confident that Lenses do not violate Bipa, out of an abundance of caution and as a testament to our commitment to user privacy, earlier this year we rolled out an in-app consent notice for Snapchatters in Illinois," the spokesperson was quoted as saying.

On Tuesday, a federal judge in Illinois approved a $92m class-action lawsuit settlement between Chinese short-form video app TikTok and users of the platform.

The lawsuit was filed over claims that TikTok violated federal law and the Illinois' Biometric Information Privacy Act.

In June, Google agreed to pay out $100m over a face grouping feature in Google Photos, which allegedly violated Bipa.

In 2021, Facebook agreed to pay $650m to settle a similar Bipa class-action lawsuit.

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