Facts
- On July 24, 2024, the court denied the Plaintiff's motion to proceed in forma pauperis due to the Plaintiff having "struck out" under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(g) and not satisfying the imminent danger exception [lines="4-7"].
- The Plaintiff was ordered to pay a filing fee of $405.00 by August 23, 2024, with a warning that failure to do so would lead to dismissal [lines="8-10"].
- An extension was granted, resetting the deadline for the filing fee to September 13, 2024 [lines="12-13"].
- As of the date of the order, the Plaintiff had failed to pay the filing fee [lines="14"].
- The court dismissed the action without prejudice for failure to comply with court orders and failure to prosecute claims [lines="16-18"].
Issues
- Whether the court properly dismissed the Plaintiff's action for failing to pay the required filing fee [lines="16-18"].
- Whether dismissal without prejudice was warranted given the Plaintiff's non-compliance with the court's orders [lines="18"].
Holdings
- The court correctly dismissed the Plaintiff's action for failing to comply with the payment of the filing fee as mandated by 28 U.S.C. § 1915 [lines="16-18"].
- Dismissal without prejudice was appropriate due to the Plaintiff's failure to prosecute the claims and comply with the court's orders [lines="18"].
OPINION
Case Information
*1 ROSENSTENGEL, Chief Judge:
In this putative class action lawsuit, Plaintiffs allege that Defendant Meta Platforms, Inc. (“Meta” or “Defendant”) violated the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act, 740 ILCS 14/1, et seq. (“BIPA”), by improperly collecting and possessing biometric identifiers and information through its Facebook Messenger and Messenger Kids applications (collectively “Messenger Applications”). (Doc. 23-2). Plaintiffs’ theory is that Meta collects peoples’ “face geometries” when they use the Messenger Applications’ filters and effects ( e.g. , bunny ears and flower crowns), and that this practice fails to comply with BIPA’s requirements. Plaintiffs bring this action on behalf of themselves and other Illinois citizens whose face geometries were allegedly collected between June 28, 2018, and the date of judgment in this case. [1]
B ACKGROUND
Meta released Facebook Messenger in August 2011 and Messenger Kids in December 2017. Compl. at ¶ 2 (Doc. 23-2). The Messenger Applications are widely available in popular app stores such as the Google Play App Store and the Apple App Store. Id. The named Plaintiffs are long-time users of the Messenger Applications: Rebecca Hartman and Joseph Turner have used Facebook Messenger for “ten-plus years,” whereas their minor children, including R.H. and E.T., have used Messenger Kids for “several years.” Id. at ¶¶ 121, 122.
Until May 2022, the Messenger Applications included facial recognition technology known as “augmented reality” or “AR.” Id. at ¶¶ 64, 65. AR, as shown below, enabled users to superimpose filters, masks, emojis, and other effects while communicating with their contacts. Id. at ¶¶ 66, 76.
This technology allegedly used “scans of face geometry to identify individuals’ location[s], expressions, and movements” in real time so that filters and effects could be applied. Id. at ¶¶ 73, 74. The resulting facial geometry scans “model[ed] users [sic] faces and track[ed] [their] expressions” based on an “estimation of the location of parts of users’ faces.” Id. at ¶¶ 72, 73. Meta then “collect[ed] the Biometric Data of each child and adult user who utilize[d] an effect or filter,” and stored it locally on a user’s operating
device and on its own servers. Id. at ¶¶ 74, 78, & 82.
Meta retains control over the data it collects, regardless of where it is stored. Id. at ¶¶ 92, 93. It controls data stored on its servers because it “owns, operates, and controls” them. Id. at ¶ 92. This, in turn, gives Meta “exclusive control over the process by which Biometric Data is harvested and stored on its servers.” Id. In addition, Meta “possesses data stored locally on [Plaintiffs’] devices because it has complete and exclusive control” over it through its operation of the Messenger Applications. Id. at ¶ 93.
Page 3 of 41
All of this happened without users’ knowledge and consent. Id. at ¶ 2. Indeed, Meta allegedly did not inform Illinois users that their biometric data was being collected when they used the AR filters on the Messenger Applications. Id. at ¶ 126. Meta also provided no way for users to opt out of its data collection while using the AR filters in the Messenger Applications. Id. at ¶ at 89. And considering its collection and possession of biometric data, Plaintiffs allege that Meta failed to publish and follow a compliant data retention and destruction policy under BIPA. Id. at ¶¶ 94, 95, 145, & 146; see also 740 ILCS 14/15(a).
L EGAL S TANDARD
A motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) “tests whether
the complaint states a claim on which relief may be granted.”
Richards v. Mitcheff
, 696 F.3d
635, 637 (7th Cir. 2012). This “generous standard” requires courts to accept the plaintiff’s
factual allegations as true and draw all inferences in his or her favor.
Domanus v. Locke
Lord LLP
,
D ISCUSSION
A. The BIPA Framework
BIPA regulates the collection, retention, use, and destruction of people’s “biometric identifiers” and “biometric information” in Illinois. A “biometric identifier” is “a retina or iris scan, fingerprint, voiceprint, or scan of hand or face geometry.” [2] 740 ILCS 14/10. “Biometric information” is defined as “any information, regardless of how it is captured, converted, stored, or shared, based on an individual’s biometric identifier used to identify an individual.”
Private entities that collect and retain biometric identifiers and information must take certain steps to ensure that such information is securely and transparently handled. See 740 ILCS 14/15(a)-(b). Under section 15(a), “[a] private entity in possession of biometric identifiers or biometric information must develop a written policy, made available to the public, establishing a retention schedule and guidelines for permanently destroying biometric identifiers and biometric information” within a certain amount of time. 740 ILCS 14/15(a). And, perhaps unsurprisingly, the entity must then comply with its biometric data retention and destruction policy. [3] Id. ; Patterson v. Respondus, Inc. , 593 F. Supp. 3d 783, 802 (N.D. Ill. 2022).
Section 15(b) prohibits a private entity from “collect[ing], captur[ing], purchas[ing], receiv[ing] through trade, or otherwise obtain[ing] a person’s or a customer’s biometric identifier or biometric information,” unless it first provides certain disclosures and obtains the subject’s informed written consent. 740 ILCS 14/15(b). Private entities are also prohibited from selling, leasing, trading, or otherwise profiting from a person’s biometric identifier or information. 740 ILCS 14/15(c). They also may not disclose, redisclose, or otherwise disseminate a person’s biometric identifier or information, unless they receive the person’s consent, the disclosure completes a financial transaction that the person authorized, or the disclosure is required by law. 740 ILCS 14/15(d)(1)-(4).
A person aggrieved by an entity’s violation of these requirements may bring an action against the entity under BIPA. 740 ILCS 14/20(a). In such actions, a prevailing plaintiff may recover his or her actual or liquidated damages (whichever is greater), and reasonable attorney’s fees and costs. §§ (a)(1)-(3); see also Sosa v. Onfido, Inc. , 600 F. Supp. 3d 859, 873-74 (N.D. Ill. 2022).
B. Incorporation by Reference
Before reaching the merits of Defendant’s arguments, the Court must address a threshold question: which documents are properly considered at this nascent stage of the litigation? This question is before the Court because Meta attached 11 documents to its motion to dismiss which, it contends, “are cognizable,” even though several of them are not mentioned in Plaintiffs’ complaint. See Decl. of Lauren R. Goldman (Doc. 23-1) (listing exhibits to Meta’s motion to dismiss and urging Court to consider them). This inquiry requires the Court to evaluate the following documents (attached to Meta’s motion to dismiss as Exhibits A through K) to determine whether they may be considered at the pleading stage:
(cid:120) Exhibit A: A copy of Plaintiffs’ complaint filed on July 6, 2023. (Doc. 23-2). (cid:120) Exhibit B: Messenger Kids’ Face and Hand Effects Privacy Notice, published in 2023. (Doc. 23-3).
(cid:120) Exhibit C: Facebook Messenger’s Face and Hand Effects Privacy Notice, published in 2023. (Doc. 23-4).
(cid:120) Exhibit D: Meta’s Terms of Service, last revised July 26, 2022. (Doc. 23-5). (cid:120) Exhibit E: Messenger Kids’ Terms of Service, last revised February 4, 2020. (Doc. 23-6).
(cid:120) Exhibit F: Messenger Kids’ Privacy Policy, last revised December 15, 2022. (Doc. 23-7).
(cid:120) Exhibit G: Facebook’s Sign-up Webpage, published in 2023. (Doc. 23-8). (cid:120) Exhibit H: Messenger Kids’ Sign-up Webpage, publication date unknown. (Doc. 23-9).
(cid:120) Exhibit I: An article titled “Introducing Messenger Kids, a New App for Families to Connect,” by Loren Chang, Meta’s Product Management Director, published December 4, 2017. (Doc. 23-10).
(cid:120) Exhibit J: An article titled “Children’s Online Privacy Protection Rule: A Six- Step Compliance Plan for Your Business,” published by the Federal Trade Commission, publication date unknown. (Doc. 23-11).
(cid:120) Exhibit K: An article titled “Messenger Kids,” published in the Facebook Messenger Help Center in 2023. (Doc. 23-12).
As a general matter, courts may consider only the plaintiff’s complaint on a motion
to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6).
Rosenblum v. Tavelbyus.com Ltd.
, 299 F.3d 657, 661 (7th
Cir. 2002). Indeed, if on a motion to dismiss, “matters outside the pleadings are presented
to and not excluded by the court, the motion must be treated as one for summary
judgment under Rule 56.” F ED R. C IV . P. 12(d). And when that happens, “[a]ll parties must
be given a reasonable opportunity to present all the material that is pertinent to the
motion.” But there are exceptions to this rule. First, “written instrument[s]” attached
to a complaint as exhibits are considered part of the complaint “for all purposes.” F ED . R. C IV . P. 10(c);
see also Thompson v. Ill. Dep’t of Prof. Reg.
,
Plaintiffs’ complaint does not attach any documents as exhibits. Thus, Meta
invokes the second and third exceptions to the general rule to argue that its exhibits
warrant consideration. Ultimately, the decision to consider extraneous documents and, if
necessary, convert a motion to dismiss into one for summary judgment is within the
Court’s discretion.
Hecker v. Deere & Co.
,
1. Exhibit A
Exhibit A is the easiest one. It is a copy of Plaintiffs’ complaint and thus the critical document to the resolution of Meta’s motion to dismiss. No further discussion is required on this point. The Court will, and indeed must, consider Plaintiffs’ complaint to resolve Meta’s motion.
2. Exhibits D, E, G, and H
Exhibits D, E, G, and H are not mentioned in Plaintiffs’ complaint. They are Meta’s Terms of Service (Exhibit D), Messenger Kids’ Terms of Service (Exhibit E), a copy of the Facebook Sign-up page showing how users create Facebook accounts for themselves (Exhibit G), and a copy of the Messenger Kids Sign-up page showing how parents create Messenger Kids accounts for their children (Exhibit H).
Meta relies on these documents to lay the groundwork for its argument that California law applies to this dispute, and that Plaintiffs’ BIPA claims are consequently not viable as a matter of law. Because the Facebook and Messenger Kids’ sign-up pages require a user to agree to Meta’s and Messenger Kids’ terms of service, and the terms of service select California law to govern disputes between Meta and its users, so the argument goes, these documents establish California as the governing law for this case. And Meta contends that these documents are fair game because they are part of its website and Plaintiffs have cited other parts of the website in the complaint, thus opening the door for the full website to be considered.
But, as noted, these documents are neither mentioned in Plaintiffs’ complaint, nor
do they appear “central” to their claims as required by the incorporation-by-reference
doctrine. Exhibits D and E lay out the terms and conditions of a user’s relationship with
Meta, but neither mentions anything about biometric data. Exhibits G and H (the sign-up
pages) provide a link to the terms and conditions (Exhibits D and E) to which a user must
consent, and they ask the user for identifying information like their name, birthday, and
gender. (Docs. 23-8 & 23-9). But the sign-up pages also do not mention anything about
biometric data. Thus, nothing in these documents suggests their centrality to Plaintiffs’
claims that Meta improperly collected biometric data in violation of BIPA.
See Patterson
,
Patterson and Hogan are particularly instructive and thus worthy of further discussion. Patterson involved a BIPA action against Respondus, Inc., a provider of a software program that allowed schools to administer online exams using a student’s webcam and microphone to record their testing environment. Patterson , 593 F. Supp. 3d at 795. The plaintiffs alleged that the program captured their biometric information without their written consent in violation of BIPA. Id. at 795-96. The plaintiffs attached two documents to their complaint: Respondus’ terms of use and a copy of its webpage containing its privacy policy. Id. at 804. Respondus, in turn, filed a motion to dismiss and attached a document titled “Privacy Center Overview” and a webpage titled “Additional Privacy Information.” Id. Respondus argued that the two documents it introduced were incorporated into the plaintiffs’ complaint by reference because the privacy policy (which the plaintiffs did attach) “links to” the Privacy Center Overview, which, in turn, “links to” the Additional Privacy Information page. Id. The court rejected this invitation to expand the record, offering the following commentary:
Respondus seems to believe that because Plaintiffs’ BIPA claims relate broadly to Respondus’ written policies, and Plaintiffs attached only some of the relevant policies to their complaints, Respondus has license to supplement the pleadings at its discretion. That is incorrect. To be incorporated by reference, the documents themselves—not just their general category or theme—must be central to the complaint and referred to in it. at 804-05 (record citations and quotation marks omitted).
In Hogan , the plaintiffs sued Amazon.com, Inc. under BIPA, arguing that its Amazon Photos service included “image recognition technology” that improperly collected users’ biometric identifiers. Hogan , 2022 WL 952763, at *1. Amazon filed a motion to dismiss with seven attachments, which, it claimed, qualified for review under the incorporation-by-reference doctrine. Id. at *2. Although the court considered two of these documents because they were “quoted in the Complaint and are central to Plaintiffs’ claims,” it declined to consider the other five. Id. at *3. Among the documents Hogan excluded from its review were Amazon’s privacy notice and its file retention policy, even though those documents were “linked” in a document that the court did consider. Id. Neither of these documents, Hogan explained, “specifically mentions how Amazon treats biometric information or identifiers, so they are not central to Plaintiffs’ claims.” Patterson and Hogan thus took a cautious approach to the defendants’ invitations to expand the record on a motion to dismiss.
Meta, for its part, relies on several other cases for the proposition that once a
plaintiff cites a website, the Court may consider the full content of that website on a
motion to dismiss. For instance, it relies on a footnote from
Gardener v. MeTV
, 681 F. Supp.
3d 864, 867 n.2 (N.D. Ill. 2023), for the proposition that “Plaintiffs referenced [defendant’s]
website, including specifically their viewing of its video content, in their complaint, such
that its contents can be incorporated by reference.” Although the footnote cites
Brownmark
’s discussion of the incorporation-by-reference doctrine, it does not address
how the website’s contents satisfy the doctrine’s centrality requirement. Similarly, in
James v. City of Evanston
, No. 20-cv-00551,
Meta also argues that Exhibits D, E, G, and H may be judicially noticed. Although
webpages may be judicially noticed as a general matter, the Seventh Circuit has urged
courts to do so cautiously.
Daniel v. Cook Cnty.
,
3. Exhibits I, J, and K
Exhibits I, J, and K are cited in the complaint, and thus, according to Meta, suitable for consideration under the incorporation-by-reference doctrine. Exhibit I is a copy of an article titled “Introducing Messenger Kids, a New App for Families to Connect,” by Loren Cheng, Meta’s Product Management Director. (Doc. 23-10). Exhibit J is a copy of an article titled “Children’s Online Privacy Protection Rule: A Six-Step Compliance Plan for Your Business,” published by the Federal Trade Commission. (Doc. 23-11). And Exhibit K is a copy of an article titled “Messenger Kids,” published in the Facebook Messenger Help Center in 2023. (Doc. 23-12).
These articles did little more than set the stage for Plaintiffs’ opening narrative. Exhibit I, as its title suggests, introduces Messenger Kids to the public and explains how parents can set up an account for their children. It is cited in three paragraphs of Plaintiffs’ 150-paragraph complaint. These three citations provide the date when Messenger Kids was launched (Doc. 23-2 at ¶ 67), explain the four-step process to set up a Messenger Kids account, at ¶ 70, and note that Meta advertised its AR filters for Messenger Kids users, Id. at ¶ 77. Exhibit J offers regulatory compliance advice to businesses that collect personal information from children under the age of 13 and are thus subject to the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (“COPPA”). Plaintiffs cited Exhibit J once in their complaint to support their assertion that federal regulators “recognize[]” “[t]he heightened sensitivity of minors’ personal data.” Id. at ¶ 61. And Exhibit K offers a how- to guide for parents and their children as to the operation of Messenger Kids, e.g. , how to set up an account, add and remove “friends,” and report improper behavior. Exhibit K is not even directly cited in Plaintiffs’ complaint; it merely appears within the Facebook Messenger Help Center, which is mentioned in the complaint once. Id. at ¶ 102. This one reference alleges that the Help Center acts as a document repository that does not make critical privacy notices and disclosures easily accessible to the public.
Conspicuously absent from all three of these exhibits is any mention of biometric
data. As a result, the Court has little problem concluding that they are not “central” to
Plaintiffs’ claims.
See Hogan
, 2022 WL 952763, at *3 (documents attached to motion to
dismiss did not “specifically mention[] how [defendant] treats biometric information or
identifiers, so they [were] not central to Plaintiffs’ claims.”). At best, these documents
provide background information about Messenger Kids as a product offering (Exhibits I
and K) and the regulatory environment regarding children’s online activity (Exhibit J).
Certainly, these documents may be
relevant
to the case; but relevance does not equate to
centrality under the incorporation-by-reference doctrine.
Patterson
,
4. Exhibits B, C, and F
Exhibits B, C, and F present a more difficult question. All three of these documents are cited in Plaintiffs’ complaint and they appear relevant to a critical issue in the case: whether, and if so, how Meta collected Plaintiffs’ biometric identifiers and information.
Exhibits B and C are nearly identical privacy notices concerning the Messenger Applications’ face and hand effects. [5] They explain that “[f]ace and hand effects are augmented reality features that react as people in the scene move, speak and express themselves.” (Doc. 23-3 at 2). The technology “estimate[s] the location of parts of your child’s face (like their eyes, nose or mouth) and points on their face, eyes or hands.” Critically, these documents state that “[t]his information is not used to identify you [or your child],” and that Meta “do[esn’t] store this information on [its] servers or share it with third parties.” (Docs. 23-3 at 2 & 23-4 at 2). Exhibits B and C do state, however, that “[t]he information may be stored on your [or your child’s] device to make repeat experiences work better.” (Docs. 23-3 at 2 & 23-4 at 2).
These disclosures present important evidence in this case because they explain (i) the type of information that is captured; and (ii) how and where it is stored. Thus, Exhibits B and C address the heart of a BIPA action under section 15(b), which prohibits a private entity from “collect[ing], captur[ing], . . . or otherwise obtain[ing] a person’s or a customer’s biometric identifier or biometric information,” unless it first obtains their informed written consent. 740 ILCS 14/15(b). They also appear highly relevant to a claim under section 15(a), which imposes certain requirements on private entities that are “in possession” of biometric identifiers and information. 740 ILCS 14/15(a). Considering the synergy between the information provided in Exhibits B and C and the legal requirements of the asserted BIPA claims, the Court finds that they are “central” to Plaintiffs’ claims and thus eligible for consideration under the incorporation-by-reference doctrine.
But eligibility under the incorporation-by-reference doctrine does not
mandate
the
Court’s consideration of extraneous documents at the motion to dismiss stage.
See Fin.
Fiduciaries, LLC v. Gannett Co.
,
The privacy notices at issue were allegedly first “created and published” in 2022.
See
Compl. at ¶ 96, (Doc. 23-2). The publication date of Exhibits B and C as attached to
Meta’s motion even suggests their publication in the year 2023.
[6]
The recency of these
documents presents two problems for Meta. First, Plaintiffs alleged that that Messenger
Applications only utilized AR facial recognition technology until May 2022, the same year
or even the year before Exhibits B and C were published.
Id.
at ¶ 64. Thus, Exhibits B and
C offer little if any value to Plaintiffs’ central allegation that Meta misused its AR
technology to violate BIPA
until May 2022
. Second, Exhibits B and C do not allow for an
informed review of the terms of Plaintiffs’ relationships with Meta over the “ten-plus
years” or “several years” that they used the Messenger Applications. Instead, they offer
a recent snapshot of Meta’s privacy notices and do not account for modifications that may
(or may not) have been added over time. This targeted view of the evidence as it existed
in 2023 would allow Meta to “amend its opponent’s pleading using documents that
[Meta] itself could have modified,” while Plaintiffs used the Messenger Applications.
Patterson
,
Because Plaintiffs’ BIPA claims cover several years, this case may involve factual questions about what [defendant’s] policies looked like at different moments in time. There is no basis for preempting that fact-intensive inquiry by concluding, as a matter of law, that these specific versions of [defendant’s] webpages govern Plaintiffs’ claims. So too here—to avoid preempting highly factual inquiries into topics like (i) the scope
of the Messenger Applications’ collection of biometric data (if they collected such data at all); (ii) whether, and if so, how, Meta informed Plaintiffs of its collection of biometric data; (iii) where and how such data was stored; and (iv) how these practices may have changed over time, the Court declines to consider Exhibits B and C in resolving Meta’s motion to dismiss.
This brings us to the last document Meta asks the Court to consider: Exhibit F.
Exhibit F is Messenger Kids’ Privacy Notice, which explains the “kinds of information”
Meta collects from users, what it does with this information, how parents can control and
delete information about their child, and when and how a user’s information is shared
with law enforcement. (Doc. 23-7). This document presents the same problems as Exhibits
B and C: it was last revised on December 15, 2022, less than seven months before Plaintiffs
filed this lawsuit, and seven months
after
Meta allegedly stopped offering its AR
technology on the Messenger Applications. Thus, it does not capture the full spectrum of
terms, conditions, and disclosures that Plaintiffs agreed to while using Messenger Kids.
And because the terms that Plaintiffs agreed to and the scope of disclosures regarding
biometric data over time are critical to Plaintiffs’ BIPA action, the Court declines to
consider Exhibit F at this stage as well.
Patterson
,
Thus, in conclusion, the Court will consider Exhibit A of Meta’s motion to dismiss Plaintiffs’ complaint (Doc. 23-2). It will not consider Exhibits B through K (Docs. 23-3 through 23-12).
C. Choice of Law
Having resolved one preliminary issue, the Court turns its attention to another: which state’s substantive law governs this dispute? Meta contends that California law applies, and that Plaintiffs are consequently barred from bringing claims under BIPA, an Illinois statute. The problem with this argument is that it relies on choice-of-law provisions in Facebook Messenger and Messenger Kids’ Terms of Service (Exhibits D and E), which the Court has excluded from its review at this stage of the case. Thus, there is no basis in the record to support the application of California law. So, the Court will consider the viability of Plaintiffs’ BIPA claims under Illinois law as that is the legal framework the complaint invokes. See Patterson , 593 F. Supp. 3d at 807 (rejecting defendant’s choice of law argument on motion to dismiss because it was based on documents the court declined to consider).
To be clear, the Court’s decision to apply Illinois law for the limited purpose of
testing the legal sufficiency of Plaintiffs’ claims does not resolve the question of which
state’s law ultimately governs this case. Plaintiffs assert that Meta’s choice-of-law theory
is beset by “factual disputes,” and the Court acknowledges this possibility. (Doc. 29 at 7).
Indeed, the Court has already explained how the recency of the documents Meta
submitted may not capture the evolution of the terms and conditions that governed
Plaintiffs’ relationship with Meta over time. Discovery may also reveal facts concerning
the enforceability of the choice-of-law provisions that Meta seeks to apply. For now, it is
enough to recognize that a choice-of-law determination is not possible based solely on
Plaintiffs’ complaint because the complaint says nothing about it.
See Foisie v. Worcester
Polytech. Inst.
,
For these reasons, the Court will defer consideration of the choice-of-law issue pending at least some discovery and further briefing under Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. [7]
D. Plaintiffs’ BIPA Claims
Meta contests the viability of Plaintiffs’ BIPA claims on two grounds. First, it argues that the information at issue is not “biometric” because it is incapable of identifying individual users and people. Second, it contends that Plaintiffs fail to allege that Meta “collected” and “possessed” the information at issue under sections 15(b) and 15(a) respectively.
1. Is the Data at Issue “Biometric”?
Meta argues that the facial scans it allegedly generated are not covered under BIPA because they are not unique to individual users and thus incapable of identifying them. Plaintiffs respond that the ability to identify individual users is irrelevant when, as here, the information at issue is a “biometric identifier” in the form of a “scan of . . . face geometry.” See 740 ILCS 14/10. Plaintiffs’ theory is based on a textual comparison of BIPA’s definitions of “biometric identifier” and “biometric information.” Whereas “biometric information” must be “used to identify an individual,” the term “biometric identifier” contains no such requirement.
Meta’s position, on the other hand, finds support in BIPA’s legislative findings and
in numerous cases that have addressed the issue. In 2008, the Illinois legislature found
that “[b]iometrics . . . are biologically unique to the individual,” and thus capable of
permit an informed choice-of-law determination at this time, the issue may be a candidate for resolution
on summary judgment.
See In re Facebook
,
identifying the person to whom they belong. 740 ILCS 14/5(c). It thus appears reasonable
to construe the term “biometric identifier” to mean “a biology-based set of measurements
(“biometric”) that can be used to identify a person (“identifier”),” as the Northern District
of Illinois did in
Rivera v. Google Inc.
,
Affording the complaint the generous interpretation to which it is entitled, the Court finds that it sufficiently alleges that Meta scanned users’ face geometries and that these scans are capable of identifying the people from whom they were taken. Plaintiffs allege that the Messenger Applications relied on AR technology to create “scans of face geometry to identify individuals’ location[s], expressions, and movements” in real time. The resulting facial geometry scans “model[ed] users [sic] faces” based on an “estimation of the location of parts of [their] faces.” These allegations permit an inference of personalization that supports the uniqueness of each scan based on the user from whom it was taken.
Indeed, the point of this process is to allow users to superimpose filters and effects
like bunny ears or cat whiskers on their face. To do so effectively, the bunny ears or cat
whiskers would have to appear in a location that creates a plausible appearance. If the
filters and effects were applied based on a generic face template that included an oval
shape to convey a facial structure, and general outlines of ears, nose, and mouth, the
filters and effects could, and often would, create an odd appearance. Bunny ears could
appear on the user’s forehead or be superimposed in a location that is not connected to
the face at all. The technology would have little entertainment or commercial value if it
applied these effects in such a non-personalized manner.
See Sosa
,
Meta contends that an “estimation” of the “location” of parts of a person’s face
cannot possibly identify them. This contention may well be validated in discovery. But
to adopt it now requires a factual determination that is not warranted under a faithful
application of Rule 12(b)(6). Scanning a person’s face to identify the locations of its
constituent parts, including eyes, nose, mouth, and ears, creates a geometric
representation that is unique to that person.
See Rivera
,
Meta also offers a second argument in support of its contention that the information at issue is incapable of identifying individual users and people, and thus not covered as “biometric” data under BIPA. On this point, Meta claims that Plaintiffs did not provide identifying information that would allow it to match the alleged facial geometry scans to individual users. Without such information, Meta argues, it is impossible to identify people whose face geometry was scanned, regardless of the uniqueness of the data. Meta cites the Northern District of Illinois’ decision in Daichendt v. CVS Pharmacy, Inc. for the proposition that scans of face geometry, without more, are incapable of identifying individual users, and thus not covered by BIPA. Daichendt , 2022 WL 17404488, at *5. But Daichendt does not offer Meta the support it claims. In Daichendt , the court observed that the plaintiffs failed to allege that they “provided defendant with any information, such as their names or physical or email addresses, that could connect the voluntary scans of face geometry with their identities.” Id. Thus, the court concluded that the plaintiffs “failed to plead the most foundational aspect of a BIPA claim.”
The allegations here are slightly more robust. Plaintiffs Rebecca Hartman and
Joseph Turner, at a minimum, allege that they created usernames and passwords for
themselves to set up their Facebook accounts.
See
Compl. at ¶ 70 (Doc. 23-2). They also
allege that Messenger Kids requires a child’s name to set up an account for them.
Id.
Although more information would have been helpful, Plaintiffs have sufficiently alleged
that they supplied identifying information that Meta could match to their face geometry
scans to identify them. These allegations meet the minimum plausibility threshold under
Rule 12(b)(6), and thus distinguish this case from
Daichendt
, where the plaintiffs did not
provide “any information” that could be matched to their face geometry to reveal their
identities.
Daichendt
,
So, crediting the truth of Plaintiffs’ allegations and drawing all reasonable inferences in their favor, the Court rejects Meta’s argument that the information at issue is incapable of identifying individual users and people, and thus not covered under BIPA.
2. Did the Messenger Applications “Collect” and “Possess” Plaintiffs’ Biometric Data?
Count I of Plaintiffs’ complaint asserts a claim under 740 ILCS 14/15(b), which prohibits private entities from “collect[ing]” or otherwise obtaining a person’s biometric data without their informed written consent. Count II advances a claim under 740 ILCS 14/15(a), which imposes certain requirements on private entities “in possession” of peoples’ biometric data. Meta contends that Plaintiffs have failed to state a claim under either section because the complaint lacks the necessary factual allegations to suggest that Meta “collect[ed]” or was “in possession” of biometric data.
BIPA does not define the terms “collect” and “possess.” When statutory terms are
undefined, the Illinois Supreme Court “assume[s] the legislature intended for [them] to
have [their] popularly understood meaning.”
Rosenbach v. Six Flags Ent. Corp.
, 129 N.E.3d
1197, 1205 (Ill. 2019). Moreover, “if a term has a settled legal meaning, the courts will
normally infer that the legislature intended to incorporate that established meaning into
the law.”
Id.
Fortunately with respect to the terms “collect” and “possess,” the Illinois
Supreme Court has offered guidance as to their respective meanings. To “collect” means
to “to receive, gather, or exact from a number of persons or other sources.”
Cothron v.
White Castle Sys., Inc.
, 216 N.E.3d 918, 924 (Ill. 2023) (quotation marks and citation
omitted). To “possess” means that a person “has or takes control of the subject property
or holds the property at his or her disposal.”
People v. Ward
,
According to Meta, Plaintiffs “acknowledge” that the only place where the information at issue is stored is on users’ personal devices, not on servers or in databases that Meta controls. (Doc. 23 at 27). Thus, so the argument goes, if the information at issue never leaves a user’s personal device, there is no way Meta could have “collected” or “possessed” it. And with this concession, Meta argues that Counts I and II are fatally defective. [8]
But the complaint reveals no such concession. In fact, it reveals the opposite.
Plaintiffs allege that Meta “collect[ed] the Biometric Data of each child and adult user who utilize[d] an effect or filter,” and stored it locally on users’ devices and on its “servers.” Compl. at ¶¶ 74, 78, & 82 (Doc. 23-2). And specifically with respect to biometric data on Meta’s servers, Meta retains “exclusive control over the process by which Biometric Data is harvested and stored.” Id. at ¶ 92. These allegations refute Meta’s claim of an “acknowledge[ment]” from Plaintiffs that the information at issue is only stored on users’ personal devices.
The allegation that Meta stores Plaintiffs’ biometric data on its servers (which the
Court accepts as true) also undercuts Meta’s legal argument that it did not “collect” or
“possess” it. Meta relies on the Illinois Appellate Court’s decision in
Barnett v. Apple Inc.
to support its contention that biometric data storage on a user’s personal device and
nowhere else is fatal to a claim that it “collect[ed]” and “possess[ed]” such data.
225 N.E.3d 602, 611 (Ill. App. Ct. 2022). In
Barnett
, the plaintiffs alleged that their
fingerprints and face geometries were stored on their own devices, which the defendant,
Apple Inc., had manufactured.
Id.
at 603-04. This information allowed them to unlock
their devices and make purchases using their biometric data. at 604. But the plaintiffs
offered “
no allegation
that Apple stores this information on a separate server or that Apple
invocation of the privacy notices from
Zablocki
, where the plaintiffs attached the documents at issue to their
complaint and “d[id] not deny [their] accuracy.”
Zablocki
,
has ever once prevented a user from deleting her own information.” Id. at 610 (emphasis added). This factual gap compelled the conclusions that Apple (i) did not “possess” the plaintiffs’ biometric data because it never exercised control over it, and (ii) never “collected” it because it “remained in a multitude of different and distinct places, namely the millions of devices of Apple’s numerous users.” at 610, 611.
Barnett
is easily distinguishable for the simple reason that Plaintiffs
do
allege that
Meta stores their biometric data on its servers as well as on users’ personal devices. And
because the Court is bound to credit the truth of this allegation over Meta’s contention
that “the data is stored not on Meta’s servers, but rather only on the individual personal
devices . . . that users themselves control,” it must also reject Meta’s argument that it
could not have “collected” or “possessed” Plaintiffs’ biometric data. (Doc. 23 at 27). By
scanning peoples’ face geometries when they use the Messenger Applications’ filters and
effects and centrally storing such data on its servers, Meta plausibly “gather[s], or exact[s]
[biometric data] from a number of persons or other sources” (collection) and “takes
control” of it (possession).
See Heard v. Becton, Dickinson & Co.
,
With that, the Court rejects Meta’s argument that Plaintiffs’ complaint fails to allege that it “collected” or “possessed” their biometric data.
E. COPPA Preemption
Meta’s final argument is that the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act
(“COPPA”), 15 U.S.C. §§ 6501-06, expressly preempts Plaintiffs’ BIPA claims with respect
to Messenger Kids. “Under COPPA and its regulations, companies that operate websites
and online services marketed toward children must provide certain disclosures about
their data collection activities and must safeguard the confidentiality, security, and
integrity of the children’s personal online information.”
Jones v. Google LLC
,
COPPA’s regulatory focus is the online collection of “personal information” from children. 15 U.S.C. § 6502(a)(1). “Personal information” is defined as “individually identifiable information about an individual collected online,” including one’s name, physical and email addresses, telephone number, social security number, and “information concerning the child or the parents of that child that the website collects online from the child and combines with [one of the aforementioned identifiers].” 15 U.S.C. § 6501(8). Under the FTC’s regulations, “personal information” also includes (i) a “persistent identifier,” like an internet protocol (“IP”) address or device serial number, which “can be used to recognize a user over time and across different Web sites”; (ii) a “photograph, video, or audio file . . . contain[ing] a child’s image or voice”; and (iii) geolocation information. 16 C.F.R. § 312.2. Operators of websites and online services directed to children are prohibited from collecting their personal information unless they meet certain requirements concerning notice, safekeeping, and transparent handling of such information. 15 U.S.C. § 6502(b). They also must obtain “verifiable parental consent for the collection, use, or disclosure of personal information from children.” Id. § 6502(b)(1)(A)(ii).
To help accomplish these goals at the federal level, COPPA contains the following express preemption clause:
No State or local government may impose any liability for commercial activities or actions by operators in interstate or foreign commerce in connection with an activity or action described in this chapter that is inconsistent with the treatment of those activities or actions under this section.
15 U.S.C. § 6502(d). The question is whether this provision preempts Plaintiffs’ BIPA claims with respect to Messenger Kids.
The Court begins by recognizing the paucity of authority discussing COPPA’s
preemptive effect on BIPA actions like this one. Indeed, the parties and this Court have
identified only one case that addresses this issue.
See H.K. through Farwell v. Google LLC
,
There are three forms of federal preemption: express preemption, conflict
preemption, and field preemption.
[9]
Aux Sable Liquid Prods. v. Murphy
,
In Patriotic Veterans v. Indiana , the Seventh Circuit confronted the issue of whether the federal Telephone Consumer Protection Act (“TCPA”) preempted an Indiana law regulating telemarketing and robocalling. Id. at 1044-46. The Indiana law barred the use of “automatic dialing-announcing device[s]” without the recipient’s consent. Id. at 1044. The TCPA, for its part, prohibited the use of an “artificial or prerecorded voice to deliver a message” without the recipient’s written consent, unless the call is “not made for a commercial purpose.” at 1045. The TCPA also contained a preemption clause in the form of a “savings clause,” which stated that it did not “preempt any State law that imposes more restrictive intrastate requirements or regulations on” robocalling, or “which prohibits” its use and the use of autodialing technology. Id. at 1046. The district court held that any law that was not expressly saved by the savings clause was preempted— i.e. , only general prohibitions and intrastate regulations and restrictions on auto-dialing technology were not preempted. Id. Thus, the district court found that the Indiana law was preempted because it was a non-covered regulation under the savings clause. Id. at 1047. The Seventh Circuit reversed because this interpretation of the TCPA’s savings clause turned the preemption analysis on its head. Id. at 1047-48. According to the Seventh Circuit, the district court erroneously “presum[ed] that laws that were not explicitly saved were preempted.” Id. at 1048. Rather, because “the TCPA says nothing about preempting laws that regulate the interstate use of automatic dialing systems,” the court had to “conclude that they are not preempted.” Id. The takeaway from Patriotic Veterans is that courts should avoid expansive interpretations of preemption language in a federal statute when a narrower construction is reasonably available.
Six years later, in
Nelson v. Great Lakes Ed. Loan Srvs.
, the Seventh Circuit
considered the preemptive effect of the federal Higher Education Act (“HEA”), which
provided that federal student loans “shall not be subject to any disclosure requirements
of any State law.”
More recently, in
C.Y. Wholesale, Inc. v. Holcomb
, the Seventh Circuit considered the
preemptive effect of a federal hemp statute on state criminal laws targeting smokable
hemp.
With this decisional authority and the presumption against preemption in mind, the Court returns to COPPA’s express premotion clause, which prohibits states from “impos[ing] any liability for commercial activities . . . that is inconsistent with the treatment of those activities or actions under this section.” 15 U.S.C. § 6502(d). Although a preemptive intent is evident here, the statute does not explain what it means for a state law to be “inconsistent” with its “treatment” of covered activities. So, the question is whether BIPA imposes requirements that are “inconsistent” with COPPA’s regulation of children’s online activity.
Again, the only court to address this question appears to be the Central District of
Illinois in
H.K. through Farwell v. Google
,
Other courts also have addressed COPPA’s preemptive effect, albeit with respect
to state laws other than BIPA. In
Jones v. Google
, the Ninth Circuit considered whether
COPPA preempted consumer protection and tort claims arising under California,
Colorado, Indiana, Massachusetts, New Jersey, and Tennessee law.
The Court finds that
Jones
is more aligned with the Seventh Circuit’s governing
framework to narrowly construe preemption provisions when possible. This conclusion
is particularly appropriate where, as here, a harmonious construction of BIPA and
COPPA is possible based on their distinct regulatory objectives.
C.Y. Wholesale
, 965 F.3d
at 547;
Nelson
,
BIPA’s subject matter is almost entirely distinct from that of COPPA. BIPA, as noted, regulates “biometric identifiers” and “biometric information.” A biometric identifier is “a retina or iris scan, fingerprint, voiceprint, or scan of hand or face geometry.” 740 ILCS 14/10. “Biometric information” is “any information . . . based on an individual’s biometric identifier used to identify an individual.” These biology-based characteristics (biometric identifiers) and information based on them (biometric information) are inherently “immutable.” Fox v. Dakkota Integrated Sys., LLC , 980 F.3d 1146, 1155 (7th Cir. 2020). COPPA, on the other hand, regulates “personal information,” in the form of data-based identifiers. For instance, “personal information” includes one’s name, physical and email addresses, telephone number, social security number, “persistent identifiers” like IP addresses and device serial numbers, and a person’s geolocation information. 15 U.S.C. § 6501(8); 16 C.F.R. § 312.2. Indeed, BIPA’s enactment was motivated, in large part, by this very distinction as shown in its legislative findings:
Biometrics are unlike other unique identifiers that are used to access finances or other sensitive information. For example, social security numbers , when compromised, can be changed . Biometrics, however, are biologically unique to the individual; therefore, once compromised, the individual has no recourse, is at heightened risk for identity theft, and is likely to withdraw from biometric-facilitated transactions.
740 ILCS 14/5(c) (emphases added). The thematic difference between biology-based and
data-based identifying information should be apparent. And considering these distinct
regulatory targets, there is no basis to conclude that BIPA’s requirements are
“inconsistent” with COPPA’s.
See H.K.
,
One form of “personal information” under COPPA does present a possible
overlap with BIPA’s regulation of biometric data: “A photograph, video, or audio file
where such file contains a child’s image or voice.” 16 C.F.R. § 312.2. A child’s “image”
and “voice” are, of course, unique to them, and thus could trigger concomitant coverage
under BIPA. But that alone is not enough to trigger preemption here. State laws that
“supplement” or even “require the same thing” as federal law are not “inconsistent” with
federal law.
Jones
,
Moreover, differences in regulatory methodologies do not justify preemption in this case because none of them involve the “inconsistent . . . treatment” of a “photograph, video, or audio file where such file contains a child’s image or voice.” Meta has identified several requirements under COPPA that, it claims are “different[]” from BIPA’s regulatory approach on similar matters. (Doc. 23 at 30-31 & n.16). First, 16 C.F.R. § 312.4(d) requires a website operator to “post a prominent and clearly labeled link to an online notice of its information practices with regard to children on the home or landing page or screen of its Web site or online service.” BIPA, on the other hand, requires an entity in possession of biometric data to “develop a written policy” for its retention and destruction and to “ma[k]e [the policy] available to the public.” 740 ILCS 14/15(a). Meta argues that because BIPA does not require a policy that is “specific to children,” its requirement that private entities publish their data retention and destruction policies is inconsistent with COPPA. This argument is easily rejected because a requirement that is silent on an issue that COPPA addresses can hardly be seen as “inconsistent” with it. Second, the FTC’s regulations allow covered entities to retain personal information “as long as is reasonably necessary.” See 16 C.F.R. § 312.10 (website operators “shall retain personal information collected online from a child for only as long as is reasonably necessary to fulfill the purpose for which the information was collected”) (emphasis added). BIPA, however, requires the deletion of biometric data when the initial purpose for its collection is no longer present or three years after the subject’s last interaction with the collecting entity. See 740 ILCS 14/15(a). This distinction is irrelevant for preemption purposes because there is no irreconcilable conflict between a federal law’s grant of permission to do something (retain data) and a state law’s requirement to eventually do the opposite (delete data). Third, Meta contends that COPPA’s requirement that website operators obtain “verifiable parental consent” before collecting a child’s personal information but allowing them to do so through “any reasonable effort,” 16 C.F.R. § 312.2, is inconsistent with BIPA’s requirement that private entities obtain a “written release” from people before collecting their biometric data. 740 ILCS 14/15(b)(3). Here too, there is no inconsistency. A federal statute that does not govern the form in which consent must be obtained is not inconsistent with a state law that does.
The Court is equally unpersuaded that the lack of a private right of action under
COPPA warrants the preemption of Plaintiffs’ BIPA claims. The Seventh Circuit
recognizes that “[t]he absence of a private right of action from a federal statute provides
no reason to dismiss a claim under a state law just because it refers to or incorporates
some element of the federal law.”
Wigod v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.
,
Based on the foregoing, the Court finds that Meta is unable to overcome the presumption against preemption in this case. See Patriotic Veterans , 736 F.3d at 1046. COPPA does not preempt Plaintiffs’ BIPA claims with respect to Messenger Kids. It bars only the imposition of liability for covered conduct that is “inconsistent” with its treatment of such conduct. 15 U.S.C. § 6502(d). Nothing in sections 15(a) and 15(b) of BIPA impose such “inconsistent” requirements.
C ONCLUSION
Meta’s Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs’ complaint (Doc. 23) is DENIED . This case will proceed to discovery and the Court will set a telephonic scheduling conference by separate order.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
DATED: September 17, 2024
____________________________ NANCY J. ROSENSTENGEL Chief U.S. District Judge
Notes
[1] Meta removed this case to federal court from the Circuit Court for the Twentieth Judicial Circuit, St. Clair County, Illinois. (Doc. 1 at 1). Thus, the allegations in Plaintiff’s complaint and Meta’s notice of removal serve as the basis for this Court’s subject matter jurisdiction (Docs. 1 & 23-2). See Dancel v. Groupon, Inc. , 940 F.3d 381, 383-85 (7th Cir. 2019). Here, subject matter jurisdiction is secure under the Class Action Fairness Act (“CAFA”). See 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d). CAFA jurisdiction requires (i) the aggregate number of members in the proposed class to be 100 or more; (ii) the parties to be minimally diverse; and (iii) the matter in controversy to exceed $5,000,000, exclusive of interest and costs. Plaintiffs’ complaint alleges that the number of putative class members is in the “thousands” or even “millions.” (Doc. 1 at 4). This satisfies the aggregate number requirement. Minimal diversity means that “any member of a class of plaintiffs is a citizen of a State different from any defendant.” 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d)(2)(A). Here, the named Plaintiffs are citizens of Illinois, whereas Meta is a citizen of California and Delaware. (Docs. 1 at 2 & 1-3 at 2). This satisfies minimal diversity. Finally, BIPA provides for statutory damages of up to $5,000 per violation. See 740 ILCS 14/20(a)(2). With a putative class of “thousands or millions” of members, the $5,000,000 threshold is easily reached. This satisfies the amount in controversy requirement.
[2] The statute excludes certain items from its definition of “biometric identifiers,” including writing samples, photographs, descriptions of tattoos, descriptions of one’s physical characteristics, and information and images generated for healthcare purposes. 740 ILCS 14/10. The excluded data types do not appear relevant here. See In re Facebook Biometric Info. Priv. Litig. , 185 F. Supp. 3d 1155, 1171 (N.D. Cal. 2016) (statutory definition of “biometric identifier” “indicate[s] that the Illinois legislature enacted BIPA to address emerging biometric technology, such as Facebook’s face recognition software . . ., without including physical identifiers that are more qualitative and non-digital in nature.”).
[3] The duty to
publish
a data retention and destruction policy “is owed to the public generally, not to
particular persons.”
Bryant v. Compass Gr. USA, Inc.
,
[4] Meta also cites
Sonrai Sys., LLC v. AMCS Grp. Inc.
, No. 16 C 9404,
[5] The Facebook Messenger Face and Hand Effects Privacy Notice (Exhibit C) contains nearly identical language to that in Messenger Kids’ privacy notice (Exhibit B)—instead of referring to the user as “your child,” it refers to the user as “you.” (Doc. 23-3); see also (Doc. 23 at 12 n.2) (Meta’s Motion to Dismiss explaining difference in wording between privacy notices).
[6] Both documents contain the following copyright notice: “© 2023 Meta.” (Docs. 23-3 & 23-4). This notice indicates 2023 as the year of first publication and identifies Meta as the owner of the copyrighted work. See 17 U.S.C. § 401(b) (outlining form and elements of copyright notice).
[7] Meta’s choice-of-law argument raises the important procedural issue of when and how to decide the case’s governing law. The parties should give this question some thought because “the optimal timing for a choice-of-law determination is case-specific.” Foisie , 967 F.3d at 42. Here, although the record does not
[8] The factual premise that Meta did not “collect” or “possess” the information at issue is based on
documents that this Court has excluded from its review. Specifically, Meta points to language in Exhibits
B and C (the Facebook Messenger and Messenger Kids Face and Hand Effects Privacy Notices) that states
“[w]e [Meta] don’t store this information on our servers or share it with third parties.” (Docs. 23-3 at 2 &
23-4 at 2). To support its bid to have these documents considered, Meta cites
Zablocki v. Merchants Credit
Guide Co.
,
[9] Meta has only raised express preemption as an affirmative defense. Thus, the Court will confine its
analysis to that issue.
See Aux Sable
, 526 F.3d at 1033-34. It is worth noting, however, that conflict
preemption and express preemption “effectively collapse into one when the preemption clause uses the
term ‘inconsistent,’” as COPPA’s does.
Jones
,
