Facebook is being sued by some 25,000 users for alleged
violations of European privacy laws in a class action suit due in a Vienna
court later.
The claim, led by Austrian data protection campaigner Max
Schrems, focuses on the way Facebook collects and forwards data.
It has been brought against Facebook's European headquarters
in Dublin, which registers all accounts outside the US and Canada.
Facebook are yet to make any comment on the case.
More than 900 UK-based users of the site are involved in
bringing the case.
The legal action also claims privacy laws are breached in
the way the networking giant monitors users when they use the site's
"like" buttons.
Mr Schrems, a law graduate, wants to stop what he calls mass
surveillance by the social networking site.
He also alleges the company co-operated with Prism, a
surveillance system launched in 2007 by the US National Security Agency.
The case includes a compensation claim of about €500 ($539;£362) per person.
Mr Schrems has said that Facebook does not believe the case
is admissible under Austrian law.
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