Facebook has lost its bid to stop a lawsuit by a 14-year old girl whose naked photo appeared on the platform.
The girl, who cannot be named because of her age, is suing Facebook (FB, Tech30) and the man who repeatedly posted her photo on the social network.
A judge in Belfast, Northern Ireland, rejected Facebook's request to
dismiss the case on Monday, meaning it will now go to a full trial.
The company argued in court that it took the picture down on more than
one occasion as soon as it was notified. The girl's lawyers said
Facebook should have prevented republication of the photo by using a process to identify and track the image.
Her lawyers said the photo was posted on Facebook as an act of revenge.
They compared posting the photo to a method of child abuse. They also
said the posts amounted to hate speech.
The girl is seeking damages for misuse of private information, negligence and breach of the Data Protection Act.
Facebook did not respond to CNNMoney's request for comment.
"It's about the inconsistency. Facebook has the tools to remove images
promptly and block them, but it is not consistent...compare it with the
case when Facebook took down a 1972 war photo last week and then
self-policed to bring it back," said Paul Tweed, media law expert and
senior partner at Johnsons Solicitors.
Facebook ran into
trouble last week for censoring the "Napalm Girl" Vietnam War photo. The
image, which shows a naked girl fleeing a napalm attack, violated
Facebook's ban on images of naked children, the company said.
But after fierce criticism, Facebook reversed course and allow users to post the photo.
-- Peter Taggart contributed reporting.
CNNMoney (London)
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