District of Columbia Attorney General Karl Racine has added its CEO Facebook Mark Zuckerberg in the collection scandal lawsuit data from Cambridge Analytica.
Racine announced the addition on Twitter this morning, saying that his investigation revealed that Zuckerberg was "personally involved in decisions related to Cambridge Analytica και την αποτυχία του Facebook να προστατεύσει τα δεδομένα των χρηστών”.
Η treatment of 2018 accuses Facebook (and now Zuckerberg) of misrepresenting the company's policies on access to third-party data by compromising user privacy with lax safeguards.
The Attorney General's Office claims that Facebook has violated the law on consumer protection procedures and is seeking civil compensation for the crime. A judge allowed the case to proceed despite Facebook's efforts to stop it in 2019.
Racine said he added Zuckerberg after examining "hundreds of thousands of pages of court-generated documents and completing a wide range of testimonials, including former employees and plaintiffs."
He did not say what exact details led him to make that decision or how deeply Zuckerberg is said to be involved in the incident.
"We take our commitment to investigate violations very seriously - and Facebook should take its responsibility to protect users just as seriously," Racine wrote on Twitter.
BREAKING: I just added Mark Zuckerberg as the defendant in my lawsuit against Facebook.
Our continuing investigation revealed that he was personally involved in decisions related to Cambridge Analytica and Facebook's failure to protect user data.
— Archive: AG Karl A. Racine (@AGKarlRacine) October 20, 2021
The complaint focuses primarily on Cambridge Analytica, a consulting firm that worked with a researcher who used Facebook's developer platform to gain access to information profiles for over 70 million target US users targeting with political ads.
He claims that Facebook knew that the system was being used to collect data from users who did not agree. The complaint also alleges that Facebook did not take appropriate action when companies violated its rules.