Categories: News

Meta Loses Attempt to Dismiss Billionaire’s Crypto Scam Ad Lawsuit

Published by
blyzniukova

Meta Loses Attempt to Dismiss Billionaire’s Crypto Scam Ad Lawsuit

A U.S. federal judge has denied Meta Platforms’ effort to dismiss a lawsuit filed by Australian billionaire Andrew Forrest, who claimed that Facebook ads used deep fakes of his image to promote fraudulent crypto schemes. California District Judge Casey Pitts ruled on June 17 that Forrest can re-file his lawsuit and attempt to demonstrate that Meta’s failure to prevent the scam ads constitutes negligence and a breach of its duty to operate in a “commercially reasonable manner.”

Asc alleged deep fake video of Forrest promoting a scam crypto scheme on Facebook. Source: CourtListener

Meta had argued that Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act shielded it from liability as a publisher of third-party content, a defense previously rejected in a similar case involving YouTube and crypto scam ads. The law, which is nearly 30 years old, states that providers of “interactive computer services” cannot be treated as the publishers of information provided by another content provider. However, Judge Pitts found that Meta had not definitively proven that Section 230 offered it an “airtight affirmative defense” against Forrest’s claims.

Forrest told The Australian that this marks the first instance in U.S. civil court where a social media company has failed to use Section 230 immunity as a defense against civil liability for its advertising practices. He emphasized that the ruling allows him to pursue proving in court that Facebook should be responsible for preventing fraudulent ads on its platform.

The judge’s order allows Forrest to amend his lawsuit to argue that Meta misappropriated his name and likeness, not just the scammers who created the fake ads. Judge Pitts noted that Forrest’s claims that Meta profited more from ads using his likeness than from those that did not were sufficient to allege misappropriation to Meta’s advantage. Additionally, she found that Forrest plausibly alleged Meta had an active role in creating the problematic ads through its advertiser tools.

The brand new newsletter with insights, market analysis and daily opportunities.

Let’s grow together!

In April, Australian prosecutors dropped criminal charges against Meta in the country over the deep fake crypto scam ads, citing insufficient evidence. Forrest, the founder of Fortescue Metals Group, is estimated by Forbes to have a net worth of $16.6 billion.

blyzniukova

Recent Posts

Bitcoin Drops Below $54K as Crypto Liquidations Near $665M

Bitcoin has fallen to a four-month low, dropping to $53,499 on Coinbase amid the news…

1 day ago

Mt. Gox Transfers $2.7B in Bitcoin to New Wallet

Mt. Gox, the defunct Japanese crypto exchange, has moved over 47,000 BTC, valued at $2.71…

1 day ago

Biden’s reelection odds dip to single digits on Polymarket

President Joe Biden's chances of reelection have dipped to single digits on the Polymarket platform,…

1 day ago

Bitcoin Drops Below $58K on Coinbase for the First Time in Two Months

On July 4, Bitcoin briefly fell to $57,874 on Coinbase, marking its first dip below…

2 days ago

Riot Platforms Sees 50% Hash Rate Surge in June

In June, Bitcoin mining company Riot Platforms boosted its deployed hash rate by 50%, resulting…

2 days ago

Surge in “Buy the Dip” Mentions as Bitcoin Dips

Mentions of “buy the dip” have surged on platforms like Reddit, X, 4chan, and Bitcoin…

2 days ago