Cloudflare Defeats Lawsuit Over Nonconsensual Intimate Imagery (NCII) on Facebook–Doe v. Cloudflare 0 ▲ Technology & Marketing Law Blog 2 hours ago · Politics · hide · 0 comments This is a putative class action lawsuit. The named plaintiff provided intimate images to her then-fiance, who (after the breakup) created fake Facebook profiles of the plaintiff and uploaded her intimate images without consent (turning the images into NCII). She requested Facebook remove the images, and when that didn’t happen, she got the local sheriff’s office to serve a search warrant on Facebook, allegedly demanding removal of the images. (That doesn’t sound like how search warrants work, but perhaps we’d analogize the search warrant to another notice that the content is NCII). The opinion doesn’t say when Facebook removed the images. Cloudflare provides content delivery network (CDN) services to Meta/Facebook. The plaintiff claims the images remained on Cloudflare months after she demanded their removal from Facebook. The opinion doesn’t indicate if the plaintiff tendered a notice directly to Cloudflare or when (if ever) Cloudflare knew/should have known that the images were… No comments yet. Log in to reply on the Fediverse. Comments will appear here.