Receiving a check, or the promise of one, from a business that may have shared your personal information for years without your knowledge seems almost unreal. Millions of Americans are currently watching the last stages of a class action lawsuit that stems from one of the largest data scandals in the history of social media.
In re: Facebook, Inc. was the formal name of the Facebook class action lawsuit. The time frame covered by Consumer Privacy User Profile Litigation is May 2007–December 2022. During those years, anyone in the US who used Facebook could be drawn into it. That pool is quite large. For background, Facebook was the world’s most popular social media platform for a large portion of that time, and many people trusted it more than they probably realized.
Naturally, Cambridge Analytica was the catalyst. Facebook admitted in 2018 that up to 87 million users’ personal data had been compromised by the British data analytics company. The disclosure that Cambridge Analytica had assisted Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign went viral. The abstract concern that platforms were making money off of your private life felt very tangible all of a sudden.
Years of legal wrangling, appeals, and litigation ensued. After rebranding in 2021, Facebook’s parent company, Meta, ultimately reached a $725 million settlement in December 2022. It’s important to note that they refused to acknowledge their misconduct. That specific detail has stuck with me forever. Following the scandal, the company claimed to have improved tools to educate users about data practices and limited access to third-party data. Depending on who you ask, it’s actually up for debate whether that qualifies as accountability or just good public relations.

On August 25, 2023, the claim deadline expired. There were almost 29 million claims submitted. Of those, about 18 million were verified. The waiting period followed, along with additional legal delays. Following final approval, two appeals were filed; neither was decided until May 2025. Patience is put to the test by this type of procedural drag. Watching years pass without a payment must have felt like a slow leak to those who filed a claim expecting a relatively quick resolution.
Following an August 2025 court order, the first settlement payment distribution finally started in September of that same year. A second distribution was then authorized by a court in May 2026. The anticipated duration of that round is June 2026. According to the settlement website, payments are determined by an individual’s duration of Facebook use during the eligible period; this results in longer usage, likely greater exposure, and a marginally larger portion of the remaining funds.
The precise amount that each claimant will receive is still unknown. When $725 million is split among about 18 million legitimate claims, it doesn’t add up to a sum that could change someone’s life. However, that is now practically irrelevant. For the majority of people, it seems like this was never really about the money. It was about the idea that personal information shouldn’t be discreetly given to data brokers and political operatives while users browse their feeds, mostly without realizing it.
Meta has moved on. With a new name, new products, and new controversies, it’s a different company in some respects. The platform that seemed ubiquitous in 2016 now faces competition for attention from TikTok and Instagram, the latter of which it owns. However, the lawsuit continues to serve as a reminder of the cost of trust during that time.

