| > There’s got to be a monetary loss here. Our email contacts are valuable. Why? Nobody lost their contacts, so what’s the $ amount it cost them? Facebook claims they’re deleting them. If that’s true, then Facebook isn’t gaining from the contacts. If users don’t lose anything and if Facebook doesn’t gain anything, what is the monetary loss? > especially at 150m user scale Where’s that number coming from? The article talks about 1.5 million users. > We could have all banded together and sold them, had Facebook not stolen them. So while it’s entirely true that contacts should never be copied without consent, and that’s exactly what happened, I guess don’t forget that these users consciously gave Facebook their passwords. No matter how much I trust what someone says they’ll do, my email account password gives access to everything in my email account, I’ve always thought it was a terrible terrible idea to ever do it when connecting services together, for this very reason. I’m saying it’s partly the users responsibility, and the outcome here is predictable, because it has been predicted before by many people. BTW, nothing stopping you from banding together and selling email addresses now, if you think it’s a good idea... the blip with Facebook is not in any way preventing that from happening. |
There is a lot of legal precedence about social engineering and how to prosecute it, this would completely fall under fraud. If I ask someone for their password to perform some service and they then I copy all of their data, that is a crime regardless of how stupid they are.
This really doesn't matter at all in a case of fraud if you gave the password willingly, it is under false pretense. If someone asks me to give them something so that they can provide a service or take those things as an investment. I willingly give them those things yes, but we have a written, verbal, or implied contract that they will do and will not do certain things with that information. Failure to follow our agreement and instead robbing me is a crime.