---
title: "Facebook privacy practices the focus of $8 billion trial targeting Zuckerberg"
description: "WILMINGTON, Delaware, July 16 (Reuters) - An $8 billion trial by Meta Platforms META.O shareholders against Mark Zuckerberg and other current and former company leaders kicks off on Wednesday over claims that they illegally harvested the data of Facebook users in violation of a 2012 agreement with the US Federal Trade Commission."
type: "NewsArticle"
publisher: "Daily Maverick"
site: "https://www.dailymaverick.co.za"
section: "Newsdeck"
author: "Reuters"
author_url: "https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/author/reuters/"
canonical_url: "https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2025-07-16-facebook-privacy-practices-the-focus-of-8-billion-trial-targeting-zuckerberg/"
published: "2025-07-16T12:37:28"
updated: "2025-07-16T12:37:30"
lang: "en-ZA"
word_count: 442
---

# Facebook privacy practices the focus of $8 billion trial targeting Zuckerberg

> WILMINGTON, Delaware, July 16 (Reuters) - An $8 billion trial by Meta Platforms META.O shareholders against Mark Zuckerberg and other current and former company leaders kicks off on Wednesday over claims that they illegally harvested the data of Facebook users in violation of a 2012 agreement with the US Federal Trade Commission.

By Reuters · Published 16 July 2025, 14:37 SAST · Updated 16 July 2025, 14:37 SAST

## Key points
- In a courtroom drama that promises more twists than a Zuckerberg algorithm, former White House chief of staff Jeffrey Zients leads a star-studded cast of billionaires defending against claims they turned a blind eye while Facebook's data was plundered by Cambridge Analytica, with shareholders now demanding a staggering $8 billion in damages.
- Jeffrey Zients, former White House chief of staff, is set to testify in a landmark trial concerning Meta's board oversight amid the Cambridge Analytica scandal.
- Key defendants include Mark Zuckerberg, Sheryl Sandberg, and other billionaires, all denying allegations of failing to protect user data.
- Shareholders are seeking over $8 billion in reimbursement for fines and legal costs stemming from the FTC's $5 billion penalty against Facebook.
- The trial, considered unprecedented in Delaware corporate law, will examine claims of deliberate oversight failures by Meta's board members.

## Content

By Tom Hals

Jeffrey Zients, White House chief of staff under President Joe Biden and a Meta META.O director for two years starting in May 2018, is expected to be one of the first witnesses to take the stand in the non-jury trial before Kathaleen McCormick, chief judge of the Delaware Chancery Court.

The case will feature testimony from Zuckerberg and other billionaire defendants including former Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg, venture capitalist and board member Marc Andreessen, and former board members Peter Thiel, Palantir Technologies PLTR.O co-founder, and Reed Hastings, co-founder of Netflix NFLX.O.

A lawyer for the defendants, who have denied the allegations, declined to comment.

The case began in 2018, following revelations that data from millions of Facebook users was accessed by Cambridge Analytica, a now-defunct political consulting firm that worked for [Donald Trump](https://www.reuters.com/world/us/donald-trump/)'s successful U.S. presidential campaign in 2016.

The FTC fined Facebook $5 billion in the wake of the Cambridge Analytica scandal, saying the company had violated a 2012 agreement with the FTC to protect user data.

Shareholders want the defendants to reimburse Meta for the FTC fine and other legal costs, which the plaintiffs estimate total more than $8 billion.

In court filings, the defendants described the allegations as "extreme" and said the evidence at trial will show Facebook hired an outside consulting firm to ensure compliance with the FTC agreement and that Facebook was a victim of Cambridge Analytica's deceit.

Meta, which is not a defendant, declined to comment. On its website, the company has said it has invested billions of dollars into protecting user privacy since 2019.

The lawsuit is considered the first of its kind to go to trial which alleges board members consciously failed to oversee their company. This is often described as the hardest claim to prove in Delaware corporate law.

Boeing's current and former board members [settled](https://www.reutersconnect.com/all?search=all%3AL1N2RW2WA&linkedFromStory=true) a case with similar claims in 2021 for $237.5 million, the largest ever in an alleged breach of oversight lawsuit. The Boeing directors did not admit to wrongdoing.

In addition to privacy claims at the heart of the Meta case, plaintiffs allege that Zuckerberg anticipated that the Cambridge Analytica scandal would send the company's stock lower and sold his Facebook shares as a result, pocketing at least $1 billion.

Defendants said evidence will show that Zuckerberg did not trade on inside information and that he used a stock-trading plan that removes his control over sales and is designed to guard against insider trading.

McCormick is expected to rule on liability and damages months after the trial concludes.

(Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware;Editing by Noeleen Walder and David Gregorio)
