သူ Like မလုပ္ထားေပမယ့္ သူ႔ သူငယ္ခ်င္းရဲ ႔ Facebook News Feed မွာ DiTirro Like USA Today ဆုိျပီး ပံုနဲ႔ တကြ ေဖာ္ျပထားျခင္း ျဖစ္ပါတယ္။ Sponsor Post အေနနဲ႔ Facebook က ေဖာ္ျပထားတဲ့ Section တစ္ခု ျဖစ္ျပီး သင့္သူငယ္ခ်င္းက Like လုပ္ထားေၾကာင္း Facebook က ေဖာ္ျပပါတယ္။ ဒါကို ျမင္ေတာ့ သူ႔သူငယ္ခ်င္း User ကလည္း Like လုပ္ျခင္းျဖင့္ ယင္း Page ကို Like တိုးေစပါတယ္။ Facebook Ads ျဖစ္ပါတယ္။ USA Today ရဲ ႔ food section ကို Like လုပ္ထားေတာ့ သူငယ္ခ်င္းျဖစ္သူက DiTirro ကို screenshot ရိုက္ဖုန္းဆက္ေမးခဲ့ျပီး Like လည္းမလုပ္ထားေၾကာင္း၊ ဝဘ္ဆိုဒ္လည္း ဝင္မလည္ေၾကာင္း၊ သတင္းစာလည္း မဖတ္ေၾကာင္း အစရွိသျဖင့္ ေျပာလိုက္ေတာ့ Facebook ကို တရားစြဲတဲ့အထိ ျဖစ္လာ ပါတယ္။
ကယ္လီဖိုးနီးယားျပည္နယ္ San Jose ျမိဳ ႔မွာ တရားစြဲျခင္း ျဖစ္ပါတယ္။ ယင္းျပည္နယ္မွာ အင္တနက္ Copyright, Privacy နဲ႔ ပက္သက္လို႔ တရားဥပေဒ သတ္မွတ္ခ်က္ ရွိေနလို႔ ျဖစ္ပါတယ္။ ဥပမာ မူပိုင္ ပိုင္ရွင္က တိုက္ရိုက္ ခြင့္မျပဳပဲ ယူသံုးရင္ အေမရိကန္ေဒၚလာ ၇၅၀ အနည္းဆံုး ဒဏ္ေၾကးေပးေဆာင္ ရပါတယ္။ ယခုလည္း DiTirro က သူ႔အမည္နဲ႔ သူ႔ Public Privacy ကို အသံုးျပဳမွုေၾကာင့္ Facebook ကို အေမရိကန္ေဒၚလာ ၇၅၀ ေတာင္းဆုိ ထားပါတယ္။ ဒါ့အျပင္ သူ႔လိုပဲ အလားတူ ခံစားရတဲ့ ဘယ္သူကို မဆုိ တရားစြဲတဲ့ အမွုမွာ ပါဝင္ၾကဖို႔ ဖိတ္ေခၚထားပါေသးတယ္။
ဒါေၾကာင့္မို႔ Facebook ဟာ ၎တို႔ စီးပြားေရးလုပ္ငန္းအတြက္ အသံုးျပဳသူ တစ္ဦးတစ္ေယာက္ခ်င္းစီရဲ ႔ မူပိုင္ န႔ဲ လြတ္လပ္ခြင့္ကို ခ်ိဳးေဖာက္ျခင္းေၾကာင္း အေမရိကန္ ႏိုင္ငံသား အခ်ိဳ ႔က ေဝဖန္ခဲ့ၾက ပါတယ္။
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Ref: pocketlint
ေအာင္ခမ္း ( smart.com.mm )
Facebook Accused of Faking 'Likes' in New Lawsuit
Facebook is being sued for allegedly falsifying member endorsements, claiming that they "Like" pages they do not support in advertisements shown to other users in the news feed.
A Colorado man has filed a class action lawsuit in San Jose, California against Facebook for using his image in ads on the social network that suggest he has "liked" USA Today's Facebook page.
In response Facebook said: "The complaint is without merit and we will defend ourselves vigorously."
"Although [DiTirro] has nothing negative to say about USA Today newspapers, [DiTorro] is not an avid reader of USA Today, nor does [DiTorro] endorse the newspaper," reads the complaint.
"[Facebook] knowingly used [DiTorro]'s likeness and Facebook profile to advertise to the general public that [DiTorro] endorsed USA Today without [DiTorro's] permission."
Newsfeed
DiTirro claims that he was only made aware of the fact that his image was being used to endorse the USA Today Facebook Page by a friend who saw the ad on his newsfeed.
The latest lawsuit is just the latest of the social media giant's legal problems. Facebook agreed to pay a $20 million (£12.6 million) settlement in August 2013 following a class action over "Sponsored Stories", which is similar to the advertisements DiTirro has complained about.
Facebook was also sued two weeks ago for allegedly intercepting information mined from private messages and selling the data to advertisers without users' content. Facebook has also denied these allegations.
The social network site says that "Sponsored Stories" will cease to be a standalone product, but instead be included in new "Social Context" ads that show users having liked a page or checking in to a restaurant – basically exactly the same concept as before, only expanded to include "Check In" updates as well.
To report problems or to leave feedback about this article, e-mail: m.russon@ibtimes.co.uk
To contact the editor, e-mail: editor@ibtimes.co.uk
To contact the editor, e-mail: editor@ibtimes.co.uk
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