We periodically publish guest posts from Internet Law Attorney and Regulatory Investigation Lawyer Richard B. Newman on topics that affect our readers.
This post contains details on two recent Internet Law topics:
- Class Action Lawsuit Against Mobile Apps Stealing Data
- Jiffy Lube held liable for their marketing firm’s use of text messages.
Read on for news coverage about the mobile apps class action and Richard’s analysis of the Jiffy Lube text message marketing ruling.
MOBILE APPS CLASS ACTION LAWSUIT
The Austin American Statesman reports:
Popular Mobile Apps allegedly “routinely steal address book data such as names, phone numbers, email addresses, job titles and even birthdays from millions of users without their knowledge or consent”.
Mobile Apps News had this additional detail:
A list of 13 plaintiffs, acting “on behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated,” have filed a suit against a series of high-profile companies that make some of the most popular mobile apps around today. The list names 18 companies in all: Path, Twitter, Apple, Facebook, Beluga, Yelp!, Burbn, Instagram, Foursquare, Gowalla, Foodspotting, Hipster, LinkedIn, Rovio, ZeptoLab, Chillingo, Electronic Arts and Kik Interactive. Coincidentally, the suit was filed on Monday, the same day that Yahoo filed a patent infringement suit against Facebook.
And it looks like the lawyers representing the plaintiffs — the Austin firms of Edwards Law, Carl F. Schwenker, and the Jordan Law Firm — appear to have filed this week in an attempt at maximum effect: the suit was made public right in the middle of the SXSW interactive event that brings upwards of 20,000 tech types to the city, including those from the companies named in the suit, and of course exactly the kind of people who use these apps regularly.
Mobile Internet Law
- Mobile Marketer: Do mobile phone users have a constitutional privacy interest in call-location data?
Businesses Liable for Text Messaging by their Marketing Firms
Vicarious Liability Rules Require Companies to Scrutinize
the Consumer Communication Methods of Marketing Partners
The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California, in the matter of Jiffy Lube International, Inc., has held that a company that engaged a third-party marketing firm to promote its services can be held vicariously liable for violations of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (“TCPA”) resulting from the marketing firm’s unlawful use of automated text messages – even if the client company did not physically send the messages at issue.
The TCPA prohibits the use of an “automated telephone dialing system” to make non-consensual calls to cell phones. The class action was initiated by six named plaintiffs who claimed that defendants violated the TCPA by sending unauthorized, automated commercial text messages. Text messages to cell phones are considered “calls” for purposes of the TCPA, and unsolicited commercial texts can be a violation of that law, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit held in Satterfield v. Simon & Schuster, Inc.
Heartland Automotive Services, Inc., a multi-unit franchisee of Jiffy Lube and a defendant in the case, moved to dismiss on the grounds that it had engaged another of the defendants, Textmarks, Inc., to send the messages. Defendant Heartland argued that because it did not send the messages itself, it could not be held liable under the TCPA. The district court rejected the argument, holding that “case law and a reasonable reading of the statute indicate that Heartland should not be allowed to avoid TCPA liability merely because it hired a different firm to send advertisements to its customers.”
The court explained that the same result was reached, at least implicitly, in Satterfield, where the Ninth Circuit did not question the fact that Simon & Schuster might incur TCPA liability even though they had hired a marketing company to send contested text messages during a book promotion. The district court noted that the Ninth Circuit described the messages as being “from” Simon & Schuster and then cited the decision in Account Outsorcing, LLC v. Verizon Wireless, where a federal district court in Louisiana faced a similar provision regulating facsimile transmissions and held that “congressional tort actions implicitly include the doctrine of vicarious liability.”
The defendants also argued that several named plaintiffs failed to plead the use of an auto-dialer. The court disagreed. One plaintiff pleaded a “specific short code” for one of the messages, and the other named plaintiffs pleaded receiving “substantially identical” text messages. The court held that this was sufficient and ultimately rejected the complaint on a technicality.
Interestingly, the court rejected the defendants’ attempt to submit some of the plaintiffs’ customer invoices into evidence at the motion stage. The defendants claimed that several of the named plaintiffs gave their phone numbers on the invoices when they got an oil change, and by doing that they effectively consented to the text messages. The district court disagreed, in part, because it was not clear whether submitting phone numbers in this manner would equate to consent in any event.
Lastly, the defendants moved to compel arbitration of the dispute with one of the plaintiffs based on an arbitration clause in the invoice he signed when he visited a Jiffy Lube. The court said the clause, which addresses “any and all disputes” between the parties, was “incredibly broad,” by not being limited to contract disputes. The court decided that the clause would be unconscionable if it was read to include tort actions such as this one.
Richard B. Newman is an Internet Law Attorney and Regulatory Investigation Lawyer at Hinch Newman LLP (New York & California)











{ 52 comments… read them below or add one }
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Of course these companies should be liable. They are ultimately in charge and if they win their case and not found liable, they will continue to ignore the problem.
Very fascinating. simply goes to indicate that keeping a watch on your business partners is usually a decent plan
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So, that’s how some mobile apps make their advertising more productive through stealing from our address books. How awful, its not really good that they do that without any consent from us. I am hoping for more security with apps.
Jackie
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Twitter: allaboutmexican
June 14, 2012 at 8:45 pm
i believe a clear Legislation is due for these kinds of crime…it’s just not right..for me it;s identity theft
Twitter: matthewacoleman
June 13, 2012 at 9:38 pm
this is such a problem…with so many apps coming out everyday this is bound to happen,information is such easily accessible nowadays
Twitter: itarticle
June 4, 2012 at 9:54 pm
How did you make this blog site look this sick! Email me if you want and share your wisdom. Id be thankful.
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Twitter: jammen89
May 29, 2012 at 12:48 am
Internet law to protect both the consumer and the seller is very important. Very essential details you are sharing with us here. Thank you.
Great Post!!! I believe there are many benefits of advertising online but many companies give a wrong form to these benefits and pin down the consumers. Internet laws are very important to be because they protect us.
Twitter: heysingapore
April 15, 2012 at 2:48 am
That’s good news but I believe that these annoying advertisement msgs will not stop and they will find out the ways to by pass this law. These mobile sms advertisement are more frustrating when you got them at the time we were sleeping ? isn’t it ?
Austin would love you to read ..Changi Airport Singapore
Twitter: GrowMap
April 15, 2012 at 3:51 pm
Hi Ausin,
What more people need understand is that laws are used to beat the little guy over the head, take his/her money, lock him/her up, and keep him/her from competing with the favored big boys. This should be obvious to people by now because big brands consistently get away with the worst behavior and little people continually get damaged by selective enforcement.
One really obvious example is that Yelp gets away with extortion continually. They get sued for it, what they’re doing is common knowledge, but even the courts refuse to hold them accountable. See Yelp Wins Extortion Case
This law will certainly benefit many consumers, in Brazil society needs this law. Enlightening article.
Twitter: getsocialapp
April 2, 2012 at 5:24 am
Glad to hear that some type of law is there as I believe stealing personal information this way is a big crime and they should be penalized.
Advertising n mobiles annoys greatly, I personally hate it
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Very interesting. Just goes to show that keeping an eye on your business partners is always a good idea.
Twitter: greentradecnd
March 20, 2012 at 4:58 pm
I was just thinking how its only a matter of time before something like that happened and here we are. I’m excited to see how this turns out since it will set a precedent for alot of information sharing issues in the future.
I’m not familiar with how class-action lawsuits work, and how effective they are. However, I would imagine that if you sue a ton of companies with a ton of money, it seems that the possibility of winning goes down drastically. Good luck to these men and women, we need protection from large corporations.
This law sounds awesome, but in a way sort of scares me; if this were to become much more mainstream, whose to stop a ton of companies from outsourcing their internet marketing needs out of the country. I’m curious how this law will handle that.
Twitter: Life2Learning
March 18, 2012 at 9:54 pm
It may not be fair but companies are responsible for who they hire. If an employee puts the company is risk of being sued then you have to watch your hiring.
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Twitter: tech_ticks
March 17, 2012 at 5:05 pm
Internet Laws are the most important thing online, which we usually ignore, even we don’t realize that laws are made for us for our convenience. Anyways Excellent Research Work.
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Twitter: GrowMap
March 17, 2012 at 5:16 pm
Hi Sonia,
We need to start realizing that laws are usually NOT good for us because they are used to control us and keep us from being financially successful while doing nothing to rein in the corruption of multi-national corporations who use them to prevent competition.
By making examples of the few, they use laws to intimidate the rest. We can stop that by LOUDLY protesting EVERY SINGLE TIME they go after one of us. When possible, we must educate those who believe the media tells the real story and that anyone arrested must be guilty.
There is a reason for every word in The U.S. Constitution. They were put there to try to prevent what has happened here. We must restore the belief that all are innocent until proven guilty and take power away from those who have corrupted our systems.
I highly recommend watching this video on How to Regain Personal Freedeom from Freedom Force International.
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Twitter: vickysadhu
March 17, 2012 at 4:05 pm
i must say Text advertising through mobile phones is maybe the most annoying thing (related to mobile phones). It’s illegal, unethical and annoying, I can’t stand it!
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Twitter: devjosephite
March 17, 2012 at 3:03 pm
Advertising through the internet is really taking a new shape and a new law to monitor this is necessary.
dev would love you to read ..Job Hunters Look in Social Networking Sites Instead of Job Sites
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