Facebook and US hospitals sued over targeted advertising

Meta (Facebook) and US hospitals have been sued for illegally using health data to target ads.

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Μια περίεργη ιστορία έχει έρθει στο προσκήνιο, με μία ομαδική που έχει κατατεθεί στη Βόρεια Περιφέρεια της Καλιφόρνια κατά της εταιρείας Meta (Facebook), του Ιατρικού Κέντρου UCSF και του Ιατρικού Ιδρύματος Dignity Health, με τον ισχυρισμό ότι οι οργανισμοί συλλέγουν παράνομα ευαίσθητα υγειονομικά δεδομένα των ασθενών τους για στοχευμένη διαφήμιση.

This tracking and data collection allegedly takes place on medical portals, where patients enter highly sensitive information about themselves, their condition, doctors, prescription drugs and more.

According to the lawsuit, neither the hospitals nor Meta informs patients about the data collection, no user consents are sought, and there is no visible indication of this process.

The plaintiffs became aware of the violation of their privacy when Facebook, the social media platform owned by Meta, started targeting them with ads completely tailored for their medical condition!.

Meta Pixels
The collection is supposedly done with the Meta Pixel, which is a piece of code that can be inserted into any website to help the website profile its visitors, but also collect data for targeted advertising.

This data collection is done for all of them , even if they don't have a Facebook account. However, for Facebook users the collected data is automatically linked to their account for deeper association.

Violation of privacy
The lawsuit alleges that Meta's tracking code is present on 33 of the top 100 hospital websites in the United States, and in seven cases, the s run under password-protected patient accounts.

According to the complaint, the 33 hospitals found to have the Meta Pixel collectively saw more than 26 million inpatient and outpatient visits in 2020 alone.

The plaintiffs allege in their lawsuit that their data was breached because they had never consented to the collection of sensitive medical data, let alone its use in targeted advertising.

Meta even includes a clause in its data privacy policy stating that its partners (Meta Pixel hosts) must have legal rights to collect, use and share user data before handing it over to the advertising giant.

However, as stated in the complaint: “Healthcare agencies do not have a legal right to use or share their patient data, as this information is protected by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) of 1996, which protects all electronic health information ».

Therefore, both Meta and the health care providers are accused of knowing that the their data collection was illegal, yet they continued to do it and hid it from the people they were watching.

In conclusion, plaintiffs, and on behalf of anyone similarly situated, claim damages for breach of confidentiality of medical information, unjust enrichment, breach of contract, Computer Data Access Act (CDAFA), as well as the Federal Wiretapping Act.

Does it happen elsewhere?
And if there are such complaints in the USA, the headquarters of the company Meta, what might be happening in the other countries?

Have you visited a hospital recently and noticed the same behavior? Especially in private hospitals and clinics?

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Written by Dimitris

Dimitris hates on Mondays .....

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