Skip to main content

Winklevoss twins taking Facebook back to court

winklevoss_twins
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The Winklevoss twins might have given up their appeal to have their $65 million stock and cash settlement with Facebook set aside, but that doesn’t mean they’re giving up their claims they were instrumental in creating Facebook. In a status report with the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts—that’s Harvard country—the Winklevoss twins and former classmate Divya Narendra have indicated they will move for discovery to determine whether Facebook suppressed evidence during the 2008 settlement negotiations.

The evidence in question are instant messages that Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg allegedly sent while at Harvard that supposedly cast Zuckerberg’s relationship with the plaintiffs in a different light. While at Harvard, the twins and Narendra founded a company called “ConnectU” that was intended to serve as a dating site for students. They hired Zuckerberg to work on the site; Zuckerberg allegedly delayed the ConnectU site so he could complete and launch the first edition of Facebook first.

Recommended Videos

The alleged instant message conversations were leaked in 2010. Highlights include statements like:

“So you know how I’m making that dating site [the twins’ site]. I wonder how similar that is to the Facebook thing. Because they’re probably going to be released around the same time. Unless I f*** the dating site people over and quit on them right before I told them I’d have it done.”

Facebook’s outside counsel has told PCWorld that the company believes the allegations are baseless and had previously been rejected in the courts.

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
How to get your share of Facebook’s $750M settlement
A silhouetted person holds a smartphone displaying the Facebook logo. They are standing in front of a sign showing the Meta logo.

Meta (formerly Facebook) might owe people who used the social media site between 2007 and 2022 some money due to privacy infringement, according to Mashable.

The social media giant has reached a settlement in a class-action lawsuit where it admits no fault in the claims against the company, but has agreed to pay out $725 million in damages. The money is available to all who submit a claim by the appropriate deadline of August 25, 2023. If you are (or were) a Facebook user, here's how to know if you're eligible and get your share of the settlement.
How to know if you're eligible
There are various stipulations you should take into consideration, including that the $725 million award will be truncated after Meta pays its legal and administrative fees. There are also eligibility, filing, and opt-out dates you want to note.

Read more
Trump allowed to return to Facebook and Instagram
Trump stylized image

Meta is ending its suspension of Donald Trump on Facebook and Instagram, allowing the former president to start posting again as he eyes a return to the White House via the 2024 election.

Trump was suspended indefinitely from the social media sites shortly after the riots at the Capitol in January 2021.

Read more
Reels are about to show up in yet another Facebook feature
A smartphone with the Facebook app icon on it all on a white marble background.

As its answer to TikTok, Reels is clearly a particularly important priority for Meta. Which is why a number of its platforms' recent feature updates often involve Reels. And today's announcement was not exempt from Meta's push to make Reels just as competitive as TikTok.

On Thursday, Meta announced that it would be bringing Reels to Facebook Groups, mentioning it as one of three new ways for users to "to connect over shared interests." Facebook group members and admins will be able to add "audio, text overlay and filters on top of their videos before sharing to bring their stories to life."

Read more