Legal Investigation Looks into Wall Street Journal Over Suspected Privacy Law Violations

Last Updated on September 23, 2024

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At A Glance

This Alert Affects:
Anyone with a Facebook account who has a digital subscription to the Wall Street Journal and watched videos on WSJ.com.
What’s Going On?
Attorneys working with ClassAction.org have reason to believe that the Wall Street Journal’s website, WSJ.com, may be using a tracking tool to secretly transmit details about certain users and the videos they’ve watched to Facebook. They’re now gathering paid digital subscribers to take action over potential privacy violations.
What You Can Do
If you’re a Wall Street Journal digital subscriber with a Facebook account who watched videos on WSJ.com, join others taking action by filling out the form linked below.
What Am I Signing Up For, Exactly?
You’re signing up for what’s known as “mass arbitration,” which involves hundreds or thousands of consumers bringing individual arbitration claims against the same company at the same time and over the same issue. This is different from class action litigation and takes place outside of court.
Does This Cost Anything?
It costs nothing to sign up, and the attorneys will only get paid if they win your claim.
How Much Could I Get?
While there are no guarantees, the federal Video Privacy Protection Act states that consumers who had their rights violated under the law could be owed $2,500.
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