Back in July, University of Maryland law professors James Grimmelmann and Leslie Meltzer Henry argued to the Federal Trade Commission that Facebook might have deceived its users by running secret
psychological experiments on 700,000 of them.
“The failure to disclose research is an omission that a reasonable consumer would consider material in deciding whether or not to use a
service,” they wrote in a letter urging the FTC to protect consumers from future research projects.
Now, after some additional digging, Grimmelmann and Henry are leveling a new
charge: They say that Facebook -- as well as OkCupid, which also conducted secret experiments on its users -- violated a Maryland state law.
“The lapses of ethical judgment shown by
Facebook and OkCupid are scandalous,” Grimmelmann writes in a new piece on Medium. “But the ethics are only half of the story. What Facebook and OkCupid did wasn’t just unethical. It
was illegal.”
The posts stem from news this summer that Facebook tinkered with news feeds of nearly 700,000 people in order to test whether their moods would be
influenced by friends' posts. For the study, Facebook manipulated users' news feeds to deliberately filter out some positive or negative posts.
Researchers then examined users' reactions and
concluded that mood was “contagious,” with users' responses matching the tone of the posts they saw: People shown more negative posts themselves began posting more negative material, while
those shown more positive comments themselves posted in a more positive tone.
Several weeks after news broke about Facebook's experiment, dating site OkCupid acknowledged today that it
tested its matchmaking algorithm by deliberately lying to users about the compatibility of potential dates.
These tests violated a 2002 law requiring researchers to obtain people's informed
consent before running tests on them, Grimmelmann and Henry argue.
“Facebook and OkCupid are in blatant violation of Maryland law,” they said yesterday in a 10-page letter to Maryland Attorney General Douglas Gansler.
They say the measure, House Bill 917, imposes several
mandates on researchers, including that they describe their experiments to subjects, disclose the risks, and allow people to opt out. “Facebook and OkCupid did almost none of this,” they
write. “No one told users they were part of a research study -- and Facebook has not told them to this day.”
Grimmelmann and Henry are urging Gansler to seek a court order
prohibiting Facebook and OkCupid from conducting any other experiments on their users, unless the companies first obtain people's informed consent.