Skip to main content
Menu Icon
Close

InfoBytes Blog

Financial Services Law Insights and Observations

District Court dismisses state law claims concerning scanned email allegations

Privacy/Cyber Risk & Data Security Courts State Issues Washington Class Action Data Breach Wiretap Act

Privacy, Cyber Risk & Data Security

On April 26, the U.S District Court for the Northern District of California granted a defendant tech company’s motion for reconsideration to dismiss a plaintiffs’ Washington Privacy Act (WPA) claims that it shared customer data with third parties without first obtaining consent. According to the amended complaint, the defendant allegedly misrepresented its privacy and security practices in violation of federal and state law by, among other things, sharing customer data with unauthorized third parties (some of which suffered data breaches), using customer data to develop products and services to sell to other companies, and falsely promising it complied with privacy and confidentiality standards. Plaintiffs alleged the company scanned 400 billion customer emails to obtain insights for its API, which it then sold to others.

In its prior ruling, the court dismissed plaintiffs’ Wiretap Act and Stored Communications Act claims but allowed the WPA claims to proceed. The defendant then filed a motion for partial reconsideration, arguing that the WPA claim is also premised on the same scanned email theory as with the other two claims that were already dismissed. The court agreed that the plaintiffs failed to sufficiently allege that their emails were scanned and dismissed the WPA claims without leave to amend because the “interception or disclosure of a communication” was necessary “in order for the conduct to be actionable.”